kopia lustrzana https://gitlab.com/sane-project/website
				
				
				
			
		
			
				
	
	
		
			103 wiersze
		
	
	
		
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			HTML
		
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			103 wiersze
		
	
	
		
			4.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			HTML
		
	
	
| <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
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| 
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| <html>
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|   <head>
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|     <title>SANE - Introduction</title>
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|     <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
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|     <meta name="author" content="Henning Meier-Geinitz">
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|     <meta name="keywords" content="sane, scanner, introduction, description, overview">
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|     <meta name="description" content="Introduction into SANE">
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|     <link href="mailto:hmg-guest@users.alioth.debian.org" rev="made">
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|     <link rel="icon" href="favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon"> 
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|     <link rel="shortcut icon" href="favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon">
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|   </head>
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| 
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|   <body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#000000">    
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|     <center>
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|       <a href="http://www.sane-project.org" target="_top"><img
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| 	  src="images/sane.png"
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| 	  alt="SANE" width="346" height="117" border="0"></a>
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|     </center>  
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| 
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| 
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|     <center>
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|       <h1>SANE - Introduction</h1>
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|     </center>
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|     
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|     <hr>
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|     <p>
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|       <em>SANE</em> stands for "Scanner Access Now Easy" and is an application programming interface
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|       (API) that provides standardized access to any raster image scanner hardware (flatbed scanner,
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|       hand-held scanner, video- and still-cameras, frame-grabbers, etc.).  The <a href="html/">SANE
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|       API</a> is public domain and its discussion and development is open to everybody.  The current
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|       source code is written for UNIX (including GNU/Linux) and is available under the GNU General
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|       Public License (the <em>SANE</em> API is available to proprietary applications and backends as
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|       well, however).  More details about the license can be found on <a href="license.html">our
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|       license page</a>. <a href="sane-support.html">Ports to MacOS X, OS/2 and Microsoft Windows</a>
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|       are either already done or in progress.
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|     </p>
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| 
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|     <p>
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|       <em>SANE</em> is a universal scanner interface.  The value of such a
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|       universal interface is that it allows writing just one driver per image
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|       acquisition device rather than one driver for each device and
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|       application.  So, if you have three applications and four devices,
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|       traditionally you'd have had to write 12 different programs.  With
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|       <em>SANE</em>, this number is reduced to seven: the three applications
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|       plus the four drivers.  Of course, the savings get even bigger as more
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|       and more drivers and/or applications are added.
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|     </p>
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| 
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|     <p>
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|       Not only does <em>SANE</em> reduce development time and code duplication,
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|       it also raises the level at which applications can work.  As such, it
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|       will enable applications that were previously unheard of in the UNIX
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|       world.  While <em>SANE</em> is primarily targeted at a UNIX environment, the
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|       standard has been carefully designed to make it possible to implement
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|       the API on virtually any hardware or operating system.
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|     </p>
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| 
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|     <p>
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|       While <em>SANE</em> is an acronym for “Scanner Access Now
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|       Easy” the hope is of course that <em>SANE</em> is indeed sane in
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|       the sense that it will allow easy implementation of the API while
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|       accommodating all features required by today's scanner hardware and
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|       applications.  Specifically, <em>SANE</em> should be broad enough to
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|       accommodate devices such as scanners, digital still and video cameras,
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|       as well as virtual devices like image file filters.
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|     </p>
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| 
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|     <p>
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|       If you're familiar with <a href="http://www.twain.org/"
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|       target="_top">TWAIN</a>, you may wonder why there is a need for
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|       <em>SANE</em>.  Simply put, TWAIN does not separate the user-interface
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|       from the driver of a device.  This, unfortunately, makes it difficult,
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|       if not impossible, to provide network transparent access to image
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|       acquisition devices (which is useful if you have a LAN full of machines,
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|       but scanners connected to only one or two machines; it's obviously also
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|       useful for remote-controlled cameras and such).  It also means that any
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|       particular TWAIN driver is pretty much married to a particular GUI API
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|       (be it Win32 or the Mac API).  In contrast, <em>SANE</em> cleanly
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|       separates device controls from their representation in a user-interface.
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|       As a result, <em>SANE</em> has no difficulty supporting command-line
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|       driven interfaces or network-transparent scanning.  For these reasons,
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|       it is unlikely that there will ever be a <em>SANE</em> backend that can
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|       talk to a TWAIN driver.  The converse is no problem though: it is pretty
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|       straight forward to access <em>SANE</em> devices through a TWAIN source.
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|       In summary, if TWAIN had been just a little better designed, there would
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|       have been no reason for <em>SANE</em> to exist, but things being the way
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|       they are, TWAIN simply isn't <em>SANE</em>.
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|     </p>
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| 
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|     <hr>
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|     <p>
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|       <a href="/">SANE homepage</a><br>
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|       <a href="imprint.html">Contact</a>
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|     </p>
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|     <p>
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|       <font size="-1">$Date$ $Author$</font>
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|     </p> 
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| 
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| </body>
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| </html>
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