Wednesday, January 25, 2006
Win your own DocuPen RC800
Ready for a contest every mobile professional will love?
I’m giving away a brand new DocuPen RC800 pen based scanner worth $299!
I just landed a very nice contract and was able to order my own RC800. So I was thinking, why not bless someone else who might not otherwise be able to afford one.
Answer this question as a reply to this thread: How would a pen based scanner like the RC800 impact your digital lifestyle?
A few guidelines on this contest.
- I won’t award a winner unless I receive a minimum of 50 entries. That means that if you post an entry and would like to see a winner awarded, then get the word out on this contest. I’m not looking for link love, I’m looking for great content for my readers that will benefit other readers and help us all with mobile computing.
- This contest will run until February 3. Any entries after Feb 3 will not count.
- I’ll pick a winner based on my own judgment.
- The winner gets to pick their own color pen, but if they want an expansion card, then I will ask the winner to pick up that additional cost.
- Leave your email address in the post.
- 1 entry per person
- I’ll throw in a copy of Michael Linenberger’s book “Total WorkDay Control using Outlook” and a copy of his interactive training CD.
UPDATE: The minimum of 50 entries has been met, but the contest doesn't end until 2/3. So, keep the entries coming. A winner will be awarded! Lets' get as many entries as possible.
Ummn..but how would it impact my digital lifestyle? well....I think I'd not know until I get it ;-)
regards,
jane
I can see a variety of uses for a portable scanner like this and all of them would be helpful in helping me become more "digital".
For example, I purchased a tablet to help cut down on the amount of paper and notesbooks I had for work. The pen could even push this further in that I could scan other people's notes after meetings (or meetings I missed). I could scan book paragraphs and article snippets during research.
I could quickly scan all the little pictures of my nieces and nephews that my siblings send me!
I could scan business cards in a flash and load them into my contact software.
At the end of the day, let's face it, the pen is just a cool and very handy gadget to have. A tool like this will not only will be used for the things I listed above, but a host of new things I haven't even thought of yet.
email: theblackhole<AT>mvwood.com
In meetings with my TabletPC making notes in OneNote people hand me their print outs of reports and documents. While I am travelling I try to travel light carrying only my Tablet PC but by the end I have paper falling all over the place and getting lost.
I have to wait before I get back to the office before I can scan them in then print them to PDF then transfer them to my tablet, the RC800 would make this so much easier.
I think the RC800 would make the people in the office think about how they work, and maybe if they didn't print out all their work that would make my life simpler as well. :)
email - jckeatingAThotmail.com
BTW - I'm in the UK
Thanks
Well, I am a still a student, I tend to be the technological trendsetter in my school. I puchased the first tablet, now many others are looking into getting a tablet instead of a regular laptop. I puchased a Dell Axim X50v instead of an iPod and have found greater functionality out of it, and recently I have seen others with PPCs and Palms instead of ipods. It's all about advancing the understanding of technology and pushing it foward, educating people about the advantages of new technology, and intergrating them into our lives instead of using alternatives,
i.e. like a huge flatbed scanner
;)
regards,
Nicholas
nkern(AT)anomisys.com
A pen-based scanner like the RC800 would allow me to bridge the gap between my Tablet-centric information management practices and the paper-based environment we so often encounter at meetings or at school. Even though many users have labeled it as too bulky to carry, I use my Gateway CX200S as my one-stop information manager; thus, I take it everywhere. Everything is in there: from my Outlook PIM to digitally-inked notes to PDFs of guidelines for the many grant programs with which I deal. Many people inquire about my Tablet when they see it, but some comment that it looks too complicated to be practical. Boy, are they wrong! Consolidating my legal pad, calendar, address book, and three-ring project binders into a single digital unit was the best decision I ever made. It has literally saved my sanity.
So how exactly would I use the RC800? I envision it making the most impact when I am away from the office for several consecutive days. It really does seem that my work life has become one perpetual meeting! Using the RC800, I could stay on top of my scanning while on the go. I could import handouts into my TPC at the meeting site and immediately begin marking them up with digital ink. This would ensure that all of the information I receive is archived on my Gateway and integrated into my filing system right where it should be. Another added bonus is increased productivity: when I do get some “task time” at the office, I can spend it getting things done rather scanning in the handouts from the last meeting I attended.
I am also getting ready to start graduate school soon and will be using my TPC heavily in my studies. The RC800 would be awesome in an academic setting as well. I could scan syllabi and other handouts in class, so there would be no chance of them getting misplaced. This would also allow me to start annotating them immediately using the power of digital ink. However, I see the RC800 making the biggest impact on the manner in which I conduct my research. Before when I went to the campus library, I would skim a book, and if I located information to include in my paper, I would compose the citation on a note card and then photocopy the necessary page(s) to take home. With the RC800, I could scan the title page and any additional pages I needed without worrying about copying fees! I could load them onto my TPC in the format of my choosing and mark them up to my heart’s content! This would save a lot of time and make me much more willing to spend a few hours researching at the library.
The beauty of the RC800 is that a connection to a computer is not required! Though I carry my Gateway most places (especially when I think I will need to take notes), I could leave it in the car every once in a while. The RC800 has built-in memory that holds several pages, as well as a slot for an expansion card. You could take the RC800 (sans TPC) to the library or a bookstore and scan to your heart’s content (within fair use limitations, of course).
It is easy to see how big a difference the RC800 would make in anyone’s digital lifestyle. I know that I could definitely put it to good use at work and school! Rob, if you think so too, please send me an email to wesleydelk at hotmail dot com. Thanks, and good luck to everyone!
Biggest impact might be in showing the legal clinic I work at that going paperless is possible(at least partially), and could save them money.
And as I said, my girlfriend will be grateful to remove any excuse for the pile of loose documents on my desk.
email:saleem DOT mamdani AT gmail DOT com
email: jaderobbins at gmail.com
2. To me, one of the features is the ability to make use of your own handwritten notes. I don't use my PocketPC (the bulk finally got on my nerves). If I have a thought while I'm eating or without my Tablet PC (or don't have the time for it to boot), I can write down my thought, scan it with the RC800, and upload it later. It's nearly an extension of the Tablet PC in this context.
3. Research in library I: often, quick notes or pieces of information are gathered from a variety of sources. Much information, in my music world, is not digitized or available online. The RC800 would allow me to gather pertinent info from journals not available for checkout.
4. Research in library II: There is ONE scanner in our university library, and it isn't the Omnibook text book kind. Some of the journals are kept in HUGE binder-books, making it impossible to create high-quality scans with the Library scanner. The scanner pen, I think, would make it possible to capture the article without much trouble. (I PDF all articles that are referenced in my class and give it to the students.)
5. Like others, it would be the ultimate in cool to scan documents in at meetings and mark it up in the Tablet. The paperless dream will have been realized.
6. I have become one who scans daily (I own two scanners and want another one): textbooks, student papers, syllabi. The RC800 would be an extension of that work.
7. To capture the fleeting document: I don't know how fast the RC800 works, but it seems to me that we all have documents we don't get to "keep." This tool gives us the ability to capture them.
I also send a lot of quotes out to friends to encourage them. This would save me a ton of typing to capture these into email.
wmwillis at gmail dot com
I'm certain that the RC800 would have a major impact on the way I use books from college.
Right now, I read thru a certain book and jot down the most important parts.
With the DocuPen I could just scan a whole page - import it into OneNote and anotate whatever I need - little bits of information our teachers give us, my own comments - since ON is so ... open ... I wouldn't be limited in what I end up doing with the content once it's in there.
I'm also certain that the DocuPen would help a lot with handouts we only get to keep for the duration of a session: Using the RC800 I could create digital copies of the content right on the spot and even send the file(s) to my classmates - if you look at it this way, you wouldnt only be helping me, but also other students from my class(es) as well.
email: liquidblaze (at) gmail (dot) com
Very cool gadget would love to have one.
I am a high school teacher and I would use the pen in my class to scan students notes and then display them on the projector and share the scanned work with the class. Which would allow myself and the class to work through forumulas with the rest of the class instead of trying to explain verbally where the errors are and make corrections. It would be an ongoing and visual learning tool. This would just be amazing in my classroom thanks for the opportunity.
Cheers, Jim
I'm a professional illustrator and animator, and I'm often called upon to scan in contracts, and color art samples when I'm on the job.
The DocuPen RC800 would allow me endless access to source material, (The amazing Powell's books would soon become my new second home) and the ability to capture my own drawings in high resolution, to be edited on my laptop.
Any work that can't be done on the TabletPc natively, would be scanned in using the Docupen. It would be a huge bonus to be able to scan invoices, and contacts, using the OCR to fax things wirelessly as well.
More importantly, as part of our textbooks this year we have the Ryan International Airlines Boeing 727 Operations Manuals, volumes 1 and 2. They are HUGE, containing hundreds of pages of diagrams and charts and well exceeding 10 lbs in weight. Even if I wanted to, I wouldn't be able to put them in my backpack and have room for anything else. Normally we just have to get by without them or take small sections out of the binders to bring to class or our 727 Simulator class, but I have been trying to scan all of them to PDFs and keep them in the M4. The greatest problem with that is that they are all double sided, so even with a scanner that can feed pages, it is very difficult to scan all of them and then re-sort them back into proper order later. With the RC800, I'd be able to scan each of the roughly 1800 pages in order as a picture and then use my OCR software to put them all together as a PDF for each chapter.
I could also use it to scan worksheets that we do in class and have to turn in during that same class period, preserving the data to study from later.
When I have a document or graphic to send back to the home office in Chicago (I work from school occasionally), I would be able to scan and send it right away without having to wait to go back to my room at the end of the day (when the office has long-since closed for the evening) and scan it there.
In conclusion, having a DocuPen RC800 would make it reasonably possible (and efficient) for me to go from a mostly-paperless system to an almost-entirely-paperless system, which would keep me much more organized and allow me to more fully enjoy the Tablet experience.
email: FlyingShawn@yahoo.com
bpiltz-at-u-dot-washington-dot-edu
I could then whip it out at the start of a paper meeting, scan in all the documents handed out, press a button and have them beamed into OneNote then spend the rest of the meeting marking them up in OneNote with the pen.
But I guess it could still be a positive impact even as "one more thing to remember carry with me and keep charged".
Email: scotty1024< at >mac.com
I would love to see the look on my professors face when i start scanning documents in a 15 person class and putting them on the tablet. It would also be useful once i get into clinical settings as i would be able to scan patient notes and records in and have some of the premade forms already on the tablet to fill out.
Plus its pretty lol
swimrgurl@gmail.com
Well, I would use this fantastic gadget to scan in my paper based notes (I am a University student). Also it would be great for library research as I would be able to scan references and citations from different sources which would make the research process a whole lot easier and my studying a fun activity.
I guess I would find plenty of other uses for DocuPen as well. But I am sure of one thing. I would use it a lot!!!
All the best,
David
David_inbox@hotmail.com
So you are a big rich guy today, huh! Giving away scanner pens and stuff!! You probably don't even remember me anymore.
Well, we went to the same school, and throughout school, I'd give you my notes to copy from. I even stayed up to make you copies of my chemistry notes. But Alas! It seems you don't recognize me. Perhaps you would if you saw my handwriting!!!
Give me the damn scanner, that way I can make copies of my chemistry notes and hand it out to my students, who like most young guys nowadays need notes sent to their tablet computers. Rob, you owe it to me, you owe it to the students I teach and you owe it to society! And if you still don't remember me, send me the scanner I'll send you the darned notes that you wanted so badly in school! Hmmmph!!
Contact me at banarijit@yahoo.com
1. Copy newspaper and magazines articles(the interesting ones like harper's magazine or speciuality journals not the mainstream garbage) are one of the few things that don't come in digital format and are going to create a lot of use for this scanner for me (I can annotate adn send them to my brother/friends overseas and chat with him about the content).
2. Posts on public boards (rentals/buy and sell/shows/services) at my grocery shop, swimming and skating arena and community center(I use a cellphone camera now, but it's not working too good).
3. Barcode/receipt/bill and bank statement archival tool preserver (sometimes I throw out too much paper stuff that I might later need). I would probably implement an archival application with time/date based cleanup, annotation support for comments, and export capability (I write software for living ;)
4. Artcover for CDs/DVDs that I borrow and rip on the fly.
5. Try to find some usage in the medical field (I'm doing medical imaging software and work for a very large US pharmaceutical distributor) so the hospitals could buy it. I'm thinking at least about barcodes for medication checkup and inventory stuff.
There are endless uses for such a useful scanner around the office and in meetings. Oh the time I would save not having to transpose all the notes I've written during meetings into my computer (no, I do not have a tablet in my electronic gadget toy box yet). Then there's school...I've returned to school to finish my degree. Scanning in research materials alone would significantly improve my life by saving me time and money. I've spent far too much time dropping my hard in quarters into the copy machine in the library...not to mention the time spent arguing with the copy machine when it decided it was tired and wanted a break when I was pressed for time! This really is a great gadget and if I don't win it...maybe Santa will bring me one next year!!
Take care, and thanks for the fun contest!
Sharon
sskodnik@Adelphia.net
I am currently on a quest. A quest to unify my personal, travel and work life digitally. I plan to do that with an ultra-portable Tablet PC. At home it will be a remote control, accessory and compliment to my main system, as a window to it but with complete portability. In my car, with a mount and wireless USB in the near future, it will be a carputer, with custom playlists, GPS navigation. At work it will be my organizational structure for my job, note-taking device supreme and tool to achieve more. What will the DocuPen RC800 add to this? The ability to make information in any of these environments portable, and more importantly, accessible. While I am currently saving money for this digital lifestyle transformation (the Tablet PC purchase) I have already been looking for just this, device with other devices of a similar nature, small, portable, and practical ways to get information into the Tablet PC.
I wanted to give you thanks for offering this contest out of the goodness of you heart. I'm sure the prize will go to some deserving soul even if it might not be me.
How it would help my digital life style? Hmmm tremendously, I'm a student. Secondly, I'm hoping to become a paralegal.
As a student being able to be paperless would be a tremendouls advantage. Handouts could be scanned and forgotten. The fact that this scanner scans in color means I can get an accurate representation of whatever I'm scanning. If I go to the library looking for information then I can scan the information into my computer.
This scanner would serve me for many years to come. The legal profession is a career of pushing paper. Being able to scan documents and write on them with my tablet would be astounding and maybe I can change the environment around me to adapt my system. it would save me a large amount of time. I think this combo of scanner and tablet would be the unstoppable.
Thanks for the listen and God Bless,
Andrew
chong@cogeco.ca
Bryan
bms23@buffalo.edu
I would use the pen for one thing, to glorify God!
I can see a potential to use the scanner as our class does rounds in the clincs, nursing homes or rescue missions, to open doors for the gospel story. When nurses, doctors or patients ask, "What is that thing," I can do like Matthew 28:19 says, and tell the story of Jesus and how He gives people like me , an ex-alcoholic/drug addict/self-centered jerk, a new life, one that now has praise unto God on my lips, He has even given me a new spirit and I can't quit talking about what He has done, not only for me, but my alcoholic/ drug addict brother, who was saved 2 months before me. We are both in our fifties and back at school, thank you Jesus! I can think of no better thing to do with a gift than to glorify God. I am just learning this Bible and I am still a rookie, but I have the new heart God has given me and I have to tell others about what He did for me, if I didn't, it would be the same as accessory to homicide. I have already been blessed just being able to write this note,,, and you know as well as I do,,, you can't outgive God! Right!
pkirkll
workin' for Jesus now!
I recently had back surgery and am limited in what I can carry. I purchased a toshiba M200 and am in love witht it! I find I need to carry little else. I am still a student but I also program to pay the bills. I frequently receive business cards and this pen would help me by letting me carry fewer items which would help the environment by not using up as much paper. I also frequently catalog things I own. I am a bit of an organization freak so scanning in titles and such would be far faster then my manually typing them in.
Oddly enough my Toshiba has helped me meet people. I am usually a bit reserved in that area but people come up to me all the time asking about it. I think this would also help me meet more people in the same fashion.
I could scan menus from places I frequent often, gas receipts, incorporate all that with quicken, and keep digital records instead of paper.
When in the library doing historical research this would be an incredible boon. Scanning articles, pictures, ISBN's and such for referencing when writing papers would be incredible!
Overall, I believe this would enhance my digitalization and move me forward on my goals to help the invironment by not having to copy everything on the copier.
Thank you for this opportunity:)
I recently had back surgery and am limited in what I can carry. I purchased a toshiba M200 and am in love witht it! I find I need to carry little else. I am still a student but I also program to pay the bills. I frequently receive business cards and this pen would help me by letting me carry fewer items which would help the environment by not using up as much paper. I also frequently catalog things I own. I am a bit of an organization freak so scanning in titles and such would be far faster then my manually typing them in.
Oddly enough my Toshiba has helped me meet people. I am usually a bit reserved in that area but people come up to me all the time asking about it. I think this would also help me meet more people in the same fashion.
I could scan menus from places I frequent often, gas receipts, incorporate all that with quicken, and keep digital records instead of paper.
When in the library doing historical research this would be an incredible boon. Scanning articles, pictures, ISBN's and such for referencing when writing papers would be incredible!
Overall, I believe this would enhance my digitalization and move me forward on my goals to help the invironment by not having to copy everything on the copier.
Thank you for this opportunity:)
hsnopi.at.hsnopi.net
EDIT: WHAT!!!?? I have to register to post comment????!!
EDIT 2: nevermind, i can post without registering now.
if you have more contest in future email me :D nietsni3 AT gmail.com, maybe i will be interested in other freebie that you throw out :D <3
First, thanks for creating a very interesting contest. I've enjoyed reading through the other entries, and I don't envy your task of choosing from among them.
I teach writing at a community college, and I ask students to bring their stories and poems to class in some digital form--email, thumbdrive, cd-r, etc. I use a Tablet PC and project their work onto a large screen where we edit and comment as a class. I can then send the result to the student via email or save it to his or her transport medium, when possible.
Problems arise when a student either forgets to bring a thumbdrive or when a floppy won't work. In those cases, which come up in nearly every class, it would be great to have an RC800 to scan the story, poem, or essay right in class. Our current practice is to have the student read the paper, but the rest of us cannot see the writing, which limits the help we can give the student with his or her writing.
Thanks again for the opportunity.
Tim Trask
timtrask at verizon.net
I'm a art student going to the Savannah College of Art and Design in the Sequintial Art department. I don't know how many times I've completed a small comic or concepts for my homework and simply lost the notes/sketches/etc sometime later. This device would drastically improve my ability to organize my thoughts and allow me to post them more freely on my new website I just started.
amuck50@gmail.com
anonymass
I think that Tracy would be an excellent person to get the pen, not only for the personal use she may put it to, but also for the value she would add to the TPC community by blogging about her experiences using it.
As for me. I simply want to know if you've found an easy to to import the scanned images in near-real-time into Acrobat and OneNote
As a soon-to-be-finished student i switched to a Tablet PC this year to cut the paperwork. A RC800 would help me greatly with establishing a total paper-less student life by scanning directly all references, papers and illustrations i come across during everyday work as well as keeping track of meeting handouts in the different projects i'm part of.
Additionally, as a network technician, it would be a great help to scan relevant parts of technical specifications and/or handbooks of the different hardware i have to configure and support.
All in all it would be a great, easy and stylish way to become more digital in cutting all paperwork and collecting all necessary documents on one central place.
Maybe i can even convince some of my coeds to switch their current behaviour of collecting handwritten papers and keeping track of them in big and ugly binders.
email: x |AT| xarumanx.net
honestly, it could help me stop spending hours rewriting the library with my tc1100. yes, touchscreen handwriting is good,even better than keyboard maybe,but not that good!
xixixix0001@yahoo.com
This entails completing a two page (typically) enrollment form, complete with personal data, beneficiary information, etc.
I then gather all the enrollments and bring them back to the office where the service staff manually inputs all of the data on the form into our administration system.
They are basically doing what I have already done!
If I can't have the application on my tablet, which is what I really want (they could even sign the enrollment form), then the ability to scan the enrollment into my tablet would eliminate the clerical step 2.
Rather than have the service staff re-do what I've done, wouldn't it be great if I could just scan the form and directly upload the enrollments into the admin system.
This would literally save us about 40 hours of work per week! That is 2000 hours per year! At $20 per hour (it's more than that, really), that would save us $40,000 per year PLUS we would avoid the inevitable occassional error that we get when the forms are manually input.
Rob, wouldn't you like to have such a meaningful impact on a firm?What a great device for us!
email - nickhoda(AT)hotmail.com
it would have a deep impact, rest assured pops ;) naah, i think you are better off giving it away to one of the other guys who really need it. just posting to make up the numbers :p
ciao
demi
On the job:
This pen scanner would allow me to scan model numbers, serial numbers and bar codes off of appliances. I'll be looking for a way to automatically import the info into the governments "item recall" database to find out if any appliances were recalled for safety issues. I'll also use it to scan and save credit card information and any other personal info I made need on file from my clients.
At home:
I would probably carry this pen scanner with me all the time. I'm always finding new information in magazines and newspapers that I'm either tearing out or copying with the old faithful pen and paper. This would allow me to copy and organize my mad pile of notes and clippings.
I see unlimited possibilites with something like this. I'm sure I'll think of even more things as time progresses.
Good luck to all, and a big Thank You to Rob Bush for this opportunity to win something as cool as this.
dmacenterprises@bellsouth.net
Of critical importance is the processing this information. Is it of value to me now or later? Where does it fit in with other information? Does it support other data, or refute it? What analogical or deductive reasoning can I apply to it? How can I put it to use, and create value by knowing it, and sharing it at the right time with the right people?
I have taken to digital voice recording. Digital recording is good, but requires transcription later- double time. Often I need to capture things which are written. If information is already in written form, why would I want to record, only to later to have to write it again?
My experience has taught me that I need the right tools just like anyone else in their stock in trade. Just like the carpenter needs the hammer, nails, and saw. I need a laptop, Palm Treo 650, Digital recorder, internet, and good old fashion books. Add to that list the DocuPen RC800.
This pen would Rock-My-World as I would be one step closer to my goal of reserving my ink pen as strictly a tool for writing my signature as needed on checks, documents, etc.
Go ahead, Rock-My-World!
Saul Castellanos
Consultant, Entrepreneur, Writer
saul AT texas.net
BUT... I figured I would add to your comments anyway. I would love having something like this to scan receipts and stuff because I am completely disorganized when it comes to paper (but very organized when it comes to files) and I often misplace receipts that could be used for tax deductions.
This actually kind of a hard question for me to answer as my hope would be that for me, it's not about impacting my digital lifestyle as much as trying to create a digital lifestyle for my students.
I work as a science teacher with emotionally disturbed (ED) students -- kids with bipolar disorder, severe depression, anxiety disorders, severe ADD and ADHD, school avoidant kids (plus many of our students have learning disabilities on top of this) -- and we're a small school; only 36 kids in the entire school! My class size is between 3 and 7 kids! But, this also means we don't always have the tools that large public schools have the budget for. I'm the only science teacher for the entire school, and the youngest (25) so a lot of the integrating technology part of education falls on me since many of the other, older teachers simply aren't that knowledgable.
I try to integrate technology into my lessons, not just for learning's sake, but because our students have been left behind in tradional methods that aren't eye-catching because they are so internally distracted and because they are frequently more visual learners who do better with things like powerpoint, videos, and internet tools. At the same time, I try to teach them study skills that they can carry back to public schools if they make it there, and eventually college. This has meant talking to them about effective computer use (Google is great but doesn't write the report for you, just gives you resources :) )
So, I try and show them tools that are out there that they can take advantage of. Kids hate reading textbooks, but make a webpage out of it, and they're there. They'll lose their homework and misplace study guides, but know where all their documents are saved on the computer. We have a handful of computers in the classroom for them to use, but the tools to get their normal written work onto the computer so easily?!?! It would blow their mind. I think that if a lot of our kids knew they could go totally digital, they would. Their generation simply prefers it. I've even had in depth discussions with them about making their next computer a tablet pc (although we can't afford those for the school) just so they could do MORE digitally. They always love that idea.
Now, don't get me wrong. I'd use it too. Being able to scan their papers to show good examples to the class, keeping electronic copies of papers after I hand them back so that I can refer back to them, and scanning student documentation! You'd be amazed how much paperwork we copy, file, and write for every single student. Some of these students have their own file cabinet drawer (2 feet deep) of documentation on their disabilities, therapy notes, and case histories. Every teacher keeps a copy of the student's Individual Education Plan and other paperwork, but imagine if we could go digital! Not to mention scanning examples from old texts for future use in presentations and the like.
Honestly, the number of uses within our setting is almost countless, but like I said, it's not about just impacting a current digital lifestyle as trying to create one for some good kids.
Thanks for the chance at this.
--Aaron
aaron DOT m DOT bernstein AT gmail DOT com
So I'm going to be a little different here. Rather than just talk about how living the portable paperless lifestyle is good, I'm going to comment more on why the DocuPen RC800 appears to be, in theory, the first nearly ideal scanner for this purpose.
I spent a couple of days digging into portable scanners about a month ago. None of them really met the bar for me. The DocuPen was closest, but lacking in some areas. First of all, previous iterations of the DocuPen have been substandard in that the scans were in black and white (NOT greyscale) and were limited to 200dpi and tiny amounts of memory. 2MB? Come on. 300 dpi is also usually recommended for OCR scanning. You would have real trouble scanning for OCR or trying to get a high quality grab of anything with a picture in it with older versions of the DocuPen.
Now that the DocuPen RC800 is out, we have a whole new ballgame. It scans at 400dpi and in true color. In addition, it has the ability to accept a MicroSD card so that it can actually hold a decent amount of scans. Like its predecessors, it charges via USB so that you don't have to lumber around with an extra AC adapter. Wow! As you can see, they knocked the ball out of the park spec wise, as you now really have, in theory, a portable high quality scanner that can fully accessorize your tablet with a minimal travel size and weight impact.
The pen form factor is extremely important as well, and one thing I haven't seen mentioned. Folks, this is so very important. Most portable scanners nowadays are sheet fed. That means you can feed paper through, but if you want to scan a magazine or page from a book, you are up the creek without a paddle. This is why the release of the RC800 could be a watershed event for portable scanning. The hand scanner pen format allows you to scan virtually anything you want. Not just loose single sheet paper.
There is one area where the DocuPen RC800 falls short, mostly by practical limitations. And that is high volume scanning of magazines or books. If you have a need for both portable scanning and heavy duty scanning work, then you might need both the RC800 and a dedicated scanner at home for books and magazines. I don't view this as a knock on the DocuPen RC800, since it has a specific purpose in life and it has the potential to do that job very well.
So in summary, yes, I want to live the paperless lifestyle just like everyone else. I would use the DocuPen RC800 to scan printed meeting notes from others, important mailings, brochures at conferences, and interesting pages from books and articles from magazines when I'm at the bookstore. I would use the power of the computer to organize, consolidate, and backup that information in a far better fashion than regular paper ever could. The trick is knowing why the RC800 fits the bill so much better than previous attempts at this vision.
Finally, if I had a DocuPen RC800, I'd write a full review on my blog examining whether the RC800 lives up to the potential it holds, or if it ultimately gets held back by other details that one often assumes should work, but don't in a new product.
Written by rkuo[AT]snapstream.com
http://www.rkuo.com
I work with scanners everyday (the mid-size workgroup kind and the big production level guys) and have a great appreciation of the power to simply scan data into a system and turn it into meaningful information. This would make it possible to do so on a completely different level.
gods.geek [at] gmail.com
I would love to own this pen scanner. I am an employee of a small software company. My long run goal is to create an organisation that will focus on solving problems of helpless people. I am not talking about a social welfare organisation that goes on providing charity services for decades. I am talking about a firm with top notch management that will ask itself "why cannot people perform at their best and do justice to this life by being happy". For this purpose, I am doing my MBA in the coming months and this pen scanner will help me tremendously in scanning all of my certificates/marksheets and other documents. Thanks for this oppurtunity! email: shainu@gmail.com
ian.mckenzie at gmail.com
email: x@y.z
where x = soroshjavidi
y = hotmail
z = com
ron.call [at] gmail.com
That same scarcity of photocopiers leads to long delays. In a Place where mail takes months to years instead of days (my personal record is an item received 3yeas and 6 months after post-mark), ANYTIME something can be stored immediately or sent by email, it is an advantage. Remember the days before photocopiers were in libraries? It's still like that in many places.
But one of the neatest things I can see doing with such a device is with literacy. Currently, we can silk-screen materials locally, but illustrations are limited to stock images on hand. I prefer local illustrations, but that is a long process (couple months turn-around)of encouraging drawings, collecting them, getting them to a city, to the printer, back from the printer, and back out to the village. Just think how neat it world be to be able to scan pictures in on the spot and distribute something within a couple days! Wouldn't that be encouraging to local artists/contributors?
myoddends (at) hotmail.com
The pen's small size will also be useful for when I move out to go to a 4 year college and beyond. Also it will be interesting to see all those people curious about what I'm doing with it.
-Timothy
biolizard_alpha (at) yahoo.com
em: angele1966ATmsnDOTcom =)
Thank you,
Steven.Zeitzew@med.va.gov
I update my website daily with the homework assignments worksheets, notes, lab handouts, movies and games and also the occasional online test and WebQuest.
The resources I use tend not to fit the states science curriculum (NY). I utilize a flatbed scanner every day when I get home from work as I update the homework, and OCR a lot of worksheets, text books pages, my own notes to save and build a data base of materials that I can manipulate in the future to keep things fresh for the current students and to make changes for next year.
With the DocuPen RC800, I would be able to utilize my planning periods at work by having the ability to scan before I come home. There would be many hours of extra work saved. The pleasure to not have to fit a book on a scanner and the luxury when scanning a picture not to have to complete the tweaking of rotating, cropping and especially waiting for the scanner to preview then have to make a second pass to scan.
In the classroom I would use the DocuPen RC800, (Optimally 4 of them), for the students to scan their homework worksheet on the way to their seats. This would allow me to make snippets and type back comments, and most importantly keep a running record for communicating with parents and their Childs quality of work. It would also be great to have my excel grade book with links to the actual assignment turned in by the student. It would be easier for me to then keep track of issues with particular questions, trends on questions students tend to get incomplete, or tend to avoid.
Until then I would use the one it to do quick scan of pieces of homework on my daily homework check around the room, my daily 2 question quizzes, and especially for keeping track of data tables, graphs, observations, and drawing from the various lab groups… All of which once digitized is quickly accessible for the day’s homework review, and lab data analysis………
Thanks for taking the time to review my response among the sea of responses. And of course, for making this into a contest!
A bit about me, I am a freelance designer. You couldn't imagine how many times I have heard from a client, 'this is my only copy of this.' Leaving it up to me to take it to Kinkos to be scanned/copied or take home and pray it doesn't get ruined in some freak accident inside my home office.
As you can see, the DocuPen RC800 would be a perfect companion for me. And in the future, I could whip out the pen and say 'no worries, let me scan a copy for myself now.' The client would be dazzled and impressed. And I would be saved the trip and or heartache of being responsible of their 'only' copy of their company logo/brochure/postcard, you get the idea.
Thanks again for having the contest!!
Sincerely,
Designer Diane
dlconnell@gmail.com
While I use an OpticBook 3600 scanner for my textbooks and papers, I am in several lab science classes this semester. I will continue to be in laboratory and clinical settings once I graduate at the end of this semester.
I need to do quite a bit of research related to these upper division courses. This includes research in documents as old as 150 years old! Being able to scan segments of these documents with the pen would make my research a bit easier. I also can't scan some textbooks, since they get thicker as I go farther into my education! (Why is that? You'd think when you get more specialized, the textbooks would get thinner!).
One thing that I will do is to also share this scanning ability with fellow students. Many have seen my TPC, and my scanned materials, and want to be able to do the same thing. By allowing them to scan in items, the DocuPen will allow me to show them how technology can enable them to perform better in their coursework and their lives. Share the wealth, right?
Renee Roberts
Basically, I'm not the most organized person, and I am struggling for space. A pen based scanner would help me to become more organized and aide me in going paperless.
iampinkandorange AT hotmail DOT com
Thanks for the chance,
Michelle :)
In a spirit of appreciation for unexpected opportunities that present themselves, I thank you for this one.
I've read your postings for quite some time on Tablet PC Buzz, which is how I came upon your contest...
I am returning to school, full-time, after about 25 years to become a social worker. I became unemployed (publishing) in early November when my company relocated my department to NYC and commuting 2.5 hours each way finally became untenable and lessened the quality of my life considerably.
I didn't complete my degree way back when--I could never decide what I wanted to do, many subjects interested me, and I wasn't inclined to embrace corporate culture--so I return to college now with excitement but a few traces of self-doubt about my ability to organize myself and be an effective learner. About 6 years ago I was diagnosed with ADD and this explained much to me though, thankfully, I've done pretty well compensating for many years.
Facing life as a student isn't something I thought I'd ever be willing to do again but I do now believe I can make certain sacrifices, financially and materially, and come out well, if not stronger, in the end. I am eager to rejoin the workforce again in a few years with my MSW(!) and assist in whatever ways I can people that need support and hope. And there are many.
I've been a tablet pc user for over two years, having purchased my Fujitsu in December '03. FYI, I use the Cross pen stylus for handwriting and find the typing option extremely useful as well. I love the convertablity of my tablet.
Anyway, I start classes on Monday (44 hours and counting down). I downloaded Agilix GoBinder Lite to set up an electronic binder and possibly for the calendar component. I have not had a chance to use the DocuPen 800 but I believe from what I've seen that it would be an enormously useful organizing tool to use for studying (i.e. pulling together the plethora of print material that will grow from each course, from handouts to library research).
Anyway, I feel rather self-conscious, frankly, putting myself into the running for this scanner pen as there are a number of other people that would make good use of it, for sure. But, on the realistically selfish side, I won't be able to afford this device and do think it could contribute significantly to being a successful student and I want that.
Rob, if I found that the pen isn't as useful as I envision it would be, I would want to return it to you to "re-gift" or otherwise offer it to someone else for free.
Anyway, I blab on.
Thank you!
Lisa
Here's how I would use it:
1. I'm studying for actuarial exams. As such, I end up needing to tote around quite a bit of material in order to be able to study when opportunity presents (at home, at the office, on the road).
While getting my notes and practice exams into OneNote for portability was easy, the bigger challenge is the textbooks into electronic format. I could scan them, but scanning 1000+ pages of reading material is extremely time-consuming, and somewhat wasteful.
I'd love to be able to make my first-pass read of the material while scanning, to maximize efficiency.
2. I telecommute and travel quite a bit for work, and I haven't quite trained my coworkers that paper is bad, especially for one who travels and needs to "tote". I'd love to digitize the odd papers I collect along the way...but sadly, full-sized scanners are a little large and bulky for someone who frequently lives out of a single carry-on bag. And I haven't yet convince either the purchasing division of our IT department, or the purchasing division of my household (my wife) that paper=bad, ultraportable scanning gadget=good.
3. In my travels for work, I frequently have meetings. And fortunately, our corporate culture is such that it's recognized as being efficient for only one person to take notes at these meetings, and then distribute xeroxed copies afterwards.
The time I acted as secretary for the meeting, attendees loved that I was able to take my OneNote notes, print them to a pdf, and mail them out. However, unfortunately neither Microsoft's handwriting recognition nor my coworker's eyes are all that good at deciphering my chicken-scratching.
I'd love to pdf-ify someone else's notes...and maybe start weaning the coworkers off of paper.
Michael Adams
mda@triskele.com
Right now I use my tablet, a Fujitsu 4010D for just about everything, from writing memos to taking notes. I love the pen based input and take all my class notes using handwriting.
Here’s the problem, I often need to take information straight out of a case or from my casebooks. Since these are often lengthily I usually type them, this means that I have to flip the screen around and use the keyboard. This can be a pain especially when I am trying to take notes as well. With the DocuPen I could just scan the parts I need and then insert them right into OneNote.
Another use would be to scan in syllabuses and class handouts. Often my profs will hand out problem sets or cases in class. Unfortunately they don't often provide a digital version of these. With a DocuPen I would be able to instantly scan these into my tablet and then answer the problems or mark up the cases right on my screen.
I could also use this in my personal life. I would love to be able to scan interesting things that I find and send them to my friends, or just be able to quickly and easily get information off of a business card or out of a book.
Thanks gain for the opportunity and I hope to hear form you
Scott Gifford
giffords@seattleu.edu
Grant Wolf
grantwolf@msn.com
So how would a pen based scanner like the RC800 would impact my digital lifestyle?
Well first of all I live in Pakistan where $299 amounts to Rs.18000, which I can't afford. So if I get it for free this would definitely be something way too important for me.
Secondly I am studying computers on my own. And I think that it will take a long time before I could earn so much that I could easily buy Zen Vision, Fujitsu P1510D, Microsoft's Ergonomic Keyboard, Wacom's Cintiq 21UX, some scanner, Ebook Gold and Macromedia's Flash Professional(Ya this is a short version of my wish list). So I think that I am quite thirsty for this free pen scanner.
neoxeekhrobe@gmail.com.
Please, let me win.
email: nielsen_birgit@hotmail.com
I am here to tell you something. I would be doing YOU a favor by taking this off your hands. Honestly. In return for the DocuPen, I can guarantee that warm fuzzy feeling for at least 2 weeks (or longer!) Think about how much better you will feel, how energized, how instinctively clearer you will feel. Imagine the possibilities. You will have increased focus. Your productivity will increase 12.2% (approximately).
Each night while you lay down in bed, you can remember back to the day you awarded that poor preacher's son that amazing scanner pen. You will think back to how, through your gift, you had made his med-school experience much more fluid. The young boy you helped will be able to copy notes in rapid speeds of 4 seconds a page. He will be able to store 100 pages, freeing him from the bulky scanner. When you are downtrodden, remember how you increased a young man’s productivity in the collegiate libraries. Imagine him recording research effortlessly. Let it lift your spirits.
And what’s even better, years down the line, when this young doctor begins his work with Doctors Without Borders, you can remember that you (albeit indirectly) helped save the lives of thousands of children in the Congo area. All because you helped one poor college student.
As far as I see it, if you found a student like this, your choice would practically be made for you.
Now… Where could you find such a particular guy.
OH! ME ME ME! I am a college Pre-med student dead set on oversees doctorial missions. I am the guy who would benefit from increased scanning capabilities. I am already a tablet user (Toshiba Customized R10), and I use an outdated Scanner at the library when I need it. When I get things from professors I have to use an old digital camera. All of the other tablet pc kids laugh at me… You would be saving me immensely from the emotional scarring I am currently incurring.
So, in conclusion, lets recap why I would benefit from the DocuPen. First I am a poor college student who bums other people scanners. Two, I am a future med-school student who could use this to further my researching capabilities. Three, I plan to make the switch to paperless at least by next semester, and the DocuPen (I like the name) would help note taking and PDF conversions. Four, I am probably the most creative applicant. And you have to admit, if anyone was going to come up with a new and creative use for this scanner, it would be me, am I right? (That’s what I thought!)
-Daniel Hunley
thedanielbaer@aim.com
---------------------------------
By the way, I wanted to say that you deserve major kudos for this contest. It really displays a genuine generosity. Thanks Mr. Bushway.
As you well know, I've been attempting to go completely paperless, with a large amount of success, but I believe I could do better.
Obviously, a device like this is meant to aid the digital lifestyle for anyone who owns this scanner. With my influence in the student and Tablet PC world, the device would aid not only me, but all my readers searching for guidance in their purchases.
The scanner would be invaluable in class and on campus for the widely reported reasons of scanning handouts before losing them, annotating on the fly, capturing information not available for purchase (library research, flyers...), and making general scanning of tests, homework, and books easier and therefore more likely to happen.
What I'm uncertain of is the quality of the scanner. I can't recommend a scanner of this type to another student or professional simply because I have no clue if the theory of use would meet the standards of reality. At $299, no student can reasonably afford to "hope" the device fits their needs (including myself), or even imagine the needs they could use it for without a first-hand student review.
Also, as Eric Mack persuaded me to try, my new OneNote challenge would benefit leaps and bounds by this scanner. While playing with OneNote 12, I found the import image from scanner option, and the automatic OCR capabilities along with the DocuPen would be phenomenal. I'd love to report my results to the community.
If I receive this scanner, I promise, in return, an amazing review investigating any and all ways the device can be used in a paperless, Tablet PC user's world. Similar to the influence The Student Tablet PC has given to the OpticBook 3600, the DocuPen could be the next big thing for the paperless individual, possibly replacing the OpticBook (which would be a wonderful find).
Thanks for the contest! The collection of entries makes for a great read.
1)A normal day in a life of a student:
He has a bunch of semi folded papers, some handouts, some test results, just stuffed into his bag. he avoids to open that section of the bag, till the end of the week. While in review, he get a series of déjà vu s of the papers he flips thru. He doesn’t start studying for the first hour, just trying to orient himself. The 1800$ he spent on the tablet pc (toshiba m200) haunt him during the night as it all sounds like a lost piece of the puzzle.
2)A normal day in a life of a student after he wins the DocuPen RC800 at cutmeloose.com !! :
As soon as he gets his handouts in class, he pulls out the humble friend, from his shirt pocket, and with a few seconds, scans the handout to memory. Now instead of stuffing the paper into his bag, he keeps it during the class for review, once class is done; he shoots the crumbled paper for the bin placed at corner of the class. His classmates applauded to his amazing bravery. Before he leaves, he will sync his DocuPen with his tablet PC. Now the puzzle is finally complete and he lives happily ever after (not to mention graduates).
Just my short story,
M Suhail
Medical historical data exist on a wide format of media; scribbled notes of advanced directives stating the final wishes of a terminal patient, long strips of abnormal cardiac rhythms of a newborn infant in the ICU, CDs of MRI images documenting the progression of a patients’ metastatic colon cancer. In order to best care for each of these patients in the 21st century, we must synthesize all these paper and electronic data in a way that other physicians can access them in a timely and efficient manner. The tablet computer is poised to enable physicians all over the world to access, literally at their fingertips, the health information of their patients and share it with each other in order fulfill this obligation. Being able to translate these varied paper sources into one electronic media will enable us to begin this path to universal access. Here is just one role of the RC800.
We as modern physicians taking care of the very ill, not only must navigate vast amounts of clinical and historical data to seek the best care for a single patient, we must also access relevant research in order to apply the best new treatments to all our future patients. This requires health care professionals to keep abreast of the latest publications and research, averaging to some 20 journal articles a day just to stay up-to-date—an impossible task. Electronic summarization of key parts of paper based publications would allow physicians to stay relatively more current in their treatment decisions. The RC800 could facilitate this process as well.
Medical research often requires many hours in the library sifting through stacks of journals and original ideas often come by the cross-pollination of people in different fields. This years Nobel Prize in medicine combined the observations of a physician treating gastric ulcers with the experiments of a microbiologist studying a unique organism. Cross-pollination requires being able to share ideas with each other. Ideas generated on a piece of paper for a new device or treatment could be quickly scanned and sent to many possible collaborators creating a new avenue for interaction and innovation.
My digital life, and more importantly the lives of my patients, could change permanently in all these ways by having a device like the RC800, I am sure such devices will become ubiquitous as we begin the transition to a paperless world. Thanks for bringing it so much attention.
Jayant
jayantsteps@gmail.com
I spend a little too much time in dusty archives pouring over old letters, documents, pictures, journal notes, magazine advertisements, etc. If a document is of interest, I ask the librarian to photocopy it. While this is fine for my personal research, it doesn't suffice for bringing those documents to my students, engaged as they are in the world of rich visual media. The DocuPen would vastly enhance my teaching by helping me to bring high quality documents to the classroom--a vlauable, if not the most valuable, pedagogical strategy for teaching history.
Gary Kroll
gary.kroll@plattsburgh.edu
Thanks for the opportunity.
I'm looking forward to the time where those science fiction stories tell of all information being available. The handheld scanner is one of the next steps toward that end.
no more wasted time
no more forgotten gems
no more valuable misses
no more forced procastrination --
wow ... no more guilty conscience -- and that's invaluable!
As part of the move we purchased a house and the previous owner has defaulted on providing the well for the property. Researching Colorado Water Law has become a mejor endevor. The pen would help with researching and preparing the required documents so we can continue to develop our lifelong dream.
On a frivolous note, I do most of the cooking, and using the pen to collect and catalogue recepies would be wonderful. As I also do the marketing and most of the shopping, I can see adding the pen to my existing palm tools to save lots of time.
It would also come in handy to prepare notes and handouts for our Foster Parent Support group.
Darn, I'm going to have to get one even if I don't win. Thanks for your consideration.
Larry
softa_larry@msn.com
Thanks
bomaonl@hotmail.com
While I would love to have a DocuPen RC800 myself (grad student, attempting to be digital, etc.), I agree with Eric Mack: If you want to benefit the overall tablet pc community, to me it is clear that the best would come from giving it to Tracy Hooten. Her goal of paperlessness is something many of us are striving for, except that when Tracy figures something out, all her readers benefit because of the detailed, relevant, helpful posts on her blog. This device is particularly suited to her because her experience digitizing documents gives her the right perspective for evaluating whether or not this technology is really useful, and worth the price. Without hesitation, I think it would be extremely helpful for me if Tracy owned one of these and blogged about how useful it actually is in digitizing media.
Besides the above, to be fair and disclose, I also have a self interest in this: I am currently shopping for my first scanner and am trying to decide between an Optibook 3600 and the RC800, and would love to read a comparison on Tracy's blog (her advice played a large part in my first tablet purchase several weeks ago).
Ok, I'll going to try to keep it short. I know how much reading you have had to do, and I do not envy your decision. Most of the uses have already been stated by other students; copy handouts, books (chapter by chapter anyway), etc. I also have many of the same reasons listed; poor, walk to school with multiple heavy books, copy readings at the library and even going to Montana State University (I don't know Jade though, I’ve never seen any other tablets here ether :-) ).
The main usefulness to me would to help with my reading. I am dyslexic and have trouble reading printed text. Computers have helped me with my reading and writing so much. I own a TC 1100 and it has made college a reality to me. I would love to use OCR to change my text books in to my own handwriting font and to have a reader program read with me to improve my knowledge consumption. I am in electrical engineering and deal with a lot of circuit diagrams in class that would be nice to scan into my mindmaps. Because of my lack in spelling and grammar I send a lot of writing work to my wonderful mother in Washington to proof read. I understand that some of this can be done with my old HP flatbed, but it is just not that practical at times.
I ready apposite the opportunity you are giving to someone who really needs it. I can not promise to change the world with a pen, but it would help mine. There is someone who desperately needs this pen; I hope you find him or her. If I don't get this pen I might just need to work more overtime this summer. This would be a valuable tool for my studies, just like my tablet. Sorry, doesn’t look like I keeped my “short post” promise.
BTW I feel that business men do not have the most to benefit from this offer. If they will save so much money, then they can afford to buy one for themselves. Sorry to rant.
You can just ignore the apple polishing of this part. I think this so wonderful. Someone is a position is helping strangers who don’t have the resources. Why don’t you hear of more of these unselfish things on the news. It is so up lifting to see this. Rob Bushway, you have shown your colors. I wish to one day be able in a position to help others by offering ways to further technological growth to people who can’t afford it.
Here’s Hoping
CoolChingster at gmail dot com
Email address: nsajan@hotmail.com
Well, being a college student it would let me scan in all of my notes, hand outs, and anything on paper that I was given. Then I could write on them with a tablet, and eliminate any use of paper.
Nate
tygrrwoods at gmail dot com
I´m a returning student to unversity first at arts, now as acountant. After i been working 7 years as an artist, now I´m working as IT in a small company of my family. And trying to describe best my personal situation, i´m growing my two brothers after our parents passed by 2 years ago.
Why i need this? basically as digital Inbox tray for my growing GTD implementation With my palm and my desktop PC and mostly evernote. I have many physical trays and the Docupen can become my portable INBOX tray. I use alot the digital recorder of my cel phone as inbox, but don´t have camera, so all those things that are visual, get in the mobile folder tray (it knows really well how to be big somethimes). There is a lot of things coming from all kind of sides, and this can helpme to cape that. I expect the system will be complete when i can afford a Tablet.
And mostly as a scanner for the all handouts and book in use at the university. I travel 100 km everyday to get to the uni, so there is plenty of time to study on my palm in the bus.
At the work i run into a lot of metings and must do a lot of photocopies and hand notes and scan in my pc. And mostly i doný do by becouse the hassle to do that. This will cut that 3 steps in one, and without leaving the room so GREAT improvment :).
I used to run a blog named "a la palmera (to the palmtree)"(coming back soon) as a envision to get out of the everyday stress of our life and live as we are siting under a palmtree, and i think the Docupen can help to get there.
I know a lot of people who can be influenciated to try to get one of these around me, but "this kind of bizzarre gadgets" are impossible to get here.
Thanks for the possiblilty you give to all us to get one of these.
Matias Mazza
gmmazza AT gmail.com
There are several opportunities for use.
I could use it at work during meetings when handouts are.. well, handed out. We get so many, I lose track of what's important.
When out in the field, literally, I do drawings. Not having to lug a laptop computer will make the whole process of documenting flora and fauna that much more enjoyable.
Thanks for the chance to win.
Tom.VelnaATnielsenmedia.com
As an avid genealogist I find myself making many copies of information that I find, and then taking these copies and either inputting the information by hand into a digital format or running them through recognition software and making and digitizing the information that way. Either way is a very long and drawn out process.
Having a DocuPen in my possesion would allow me to get more work done in a shorter amount of time, which would allow me to be able to share this information more readily with others.
Thanks
Greg Hubert
My email address is hghubert@hotmail.com
I scan and read lots of articles in technology related fields. I have a bad memory so I clip pieces of paper to remind my to do further study. My pockets are full of scaps of paper everyday and it drives my wife mad. I would use the DocuPen to collect my data and then I'd be able to go paperless.
thanks
dave baehr
zippidee@gmail.com
Having a full-time job as a software developer makes it really important for me to quickly be able to catch up with messages from the school and kindergarten. Each day I need to keep track of four different people's needs and schedules, and this can often be a problem when plans are changing or when they recieve papers from school with important messages I need to take into account when sorting out ours plans.
My twin girls have different activities almost everyday, including football, band rehearsals, violin rehearsal, chess and dance lessons. This means that I need to keep track of what they are going to do each day and what type of clothes/equipment they need to cary out their activites.
A lot of the information is given me through small notes that they drop on the kitchen table or that I find at the bottom of their bags. It would have been a tremendeous help for me to be able to scan these and add them to my outlook schedule or save them in OneNote.
Where else would I use this? Business card scanning. I spend quite a bit of time hand keying all the relevant information from new contacts business cards into my contact manager. This will save quite a bit more time for me as well.
Lastly, this would be a great tool for notetaking at conferences as well as at 30,000 feet. I go to quite a bit of conferences and this would be ideal to scan pages from the conference guide and presentation handouts. Additionally, sometimes you're reading through that trade mag when trying to relax on the airplane, when that new customer's ad pops right up on the next page. Great time to pull out the ole handy dandy DocuPen RC800, scan it in and then send an e-mail when you land congratulating your customer on a great looking ad. Sometimes in that same trade mag, there's a great article that you want to share with colleagues, but don't feel like lugging the whole mag with you, cutting out the pages, photocopying them when you finally get home and dropping them in the mail or at the next meeting, when the ad might have already lost it's relevance. But, with one scan of the DocuPen RC800, scan the article, and then send out the e-mail to your colleagues.
Looking forward to hopefully receiving a brand new DocuPEN RC800.
Christopher Smith
CSmithHPS(AT)yahoo.com
Im a Student and my first impression was to use it for scanning test handout papers because its not allowed to take them with us after a test. It would help other students who could prepare better for these tests.
Just a thought
best regards
prendinger@gmail.com
I think it is really generous from you to give away this scanner.
I am studying physics at the University of Vienna, Austria.
Our lecturers are not really good at using computers for their teaching-most of them still do their lectures on the blackboard and don't offer lecture notes. I am also volunteering for the local students' association, which has the side effect that I tend to miss some lectures. To get the notes from these lectures I usually borrow someone's notes for a day so that I can copy them, which is not always easy because people need their notes to study. It would be a hell of a lot easier if I could just scan them on the spot.
To combat the lack of "official" lecture notes I help maintain an archive of copied lecture notes that students can borrow and copy. When students offer their lecture notes for this archive, they often come in paper notebooks and so I can't put them into a document feeder. It would help a lot if I could just move the scanner over every page instead of having to copy up to 200 single pages with the copy machine.
Also, I would like to use the scanner to scan some pages out of library books-and make them available to my colleagues if they're relevant for an assignment.
I must admit that unlike many people in this forum I don't own a Tablet PC and I don't have a really mobile lifestyle at the moment. I used to take my laptop to Uni but it was stolen from me while I was backpacking Oz after an exchange semester. Since the insurance companies are saying "nay" I'm stuck with my old desktop until I can afford a new laptop :(
Anyway, I'd like to congratulate you to your really interesting blog!
Keep up the good work,
Daniel
(daniel imrich & gmail com)
With this device, I will scan my papers, and immediately toss them into a trash receptacle for disposal. This device will greatly allow me to reduce my contact and exposure time to contaminated handout lectures and graded papers by about 77%.
Finally, I would like to add, even though it may only slightly improve my efficiency, I will feel so much better not needing too always ware gloves when reviewing handouts and returned papers from instructors; thus eliminating the need for lamping them under Ultra Violet radiation 15 minutes before touching them bare handed. God willing I will own this gizmo.
Cheers,
;}flowtn
I'm attending college in Germany and since our universities don't have a lot of money they don't use up-to-date technology as much as their students. Since starting my studies in physics I have set out on a quest to bringing all of our lecture notes and scripts online and making them searchable documents.
Since we get a lot of handouts during lecture it would be amazing to be able to scan them right there and then and then be able to incorperate them into the database and upload them immediately.
This would prove valuable to all my fellow students, who often have trouble keeping everything together and having information at hand quickly. It seems like the RC800 would be an amazing tool that would enable me to achieve this task.
Regards, Paul
heine.paul(AT)gmail.com
gaspode_(at thingy)hotmail.com
You hear about a potential new customer, do research trying to gain knowledge of them, a way through the defenses to find that right person to speak to.
We oftentimes call the receptionist at the front desk "The Gatekeeper". Sometimes they help, sometimes they hinder refusing to offer any small shred of information.
I could see a small scanner like this being useful when I drop in unannounced to cold call looking for names. Rather than trying to grab a half dozen possibly relevant cards before being shoed out the door, I could scan names and numbers. I could scan names of visitors from their visitor log books as possible other leads for my equipment. Usually a pretty nice list of their suppliers and customers are right there, but they'd never let you copy all that info down. Short of the spy camera glasses, a scanner pen seems like the next best choice.
flatspinATintelligenciaDOTcom
I’m sitting in the library. I look at my watch. It’s almost time for the next lecture. I take out my DocuPen scan the last few pages and read them up after the lecture. I am still in time.
I missed the first minutes of a lecture because I have been busy talking to an other professor about a subject. I enter the auditorium and my fellow student is as courtesy to hand over her first papers of notes which I scan in a few seconds and hand her back immediately. She asked me if she can get a digital copy. Of course she can.
I meet a colleague at the floor. He shows me his latest research results, hand written, and wants my opinion on it. I take out my DocuPen scan them quickly and tell him to call him back as soon as I could have a look at it.
I’m on a travel. New in town. I am looking for specific service. I go to a phone booth. I search for the suppliers in phone book. I take out my DocuPen and scan the numbers from the book so I can call them later at any time without having to grap paper from the book.
I have an error message on the display of whatsoever screen. The system is hang. I try to scan the error message on the display with my DocuPen and send the exact error messages to the administrator using my laptop.
I car crashed into mine. I take out the DocuPen and scan the others persons insurance license, as well as his driver license and his number plate.
There’s a man at the door collecting money for charity showing me his membership card. I scan the card with his approval asking him to step by in a few days when I have verified that he really has been send from organization xy.
I’m on a journey through a new city. I have forgotten the city map but can see a street map at the bus station. I step out of the car using my DocuPen to make a copy of it which I can now use on my laptop.
I am doing research. Working through several books. To make my own brief summary I scan some paragraphs, sentences, pictures of different books and later on use the material to finish my own quick reference.
I ask somebody at the information desk for an information. He tells me to take a note handing be over a paper where I can see the numbers. I just take out my DocuPen and scan it.
I’m sitting in the train and see how someone next to me reads an interesting book. We talk about it and I decide to buy it too. I just scan the international bar code of his book so that I later will be able to order the right one.
In the pharmacy I am offered 3 different products and I have to clue which is best. I just scan the package of all of them with my DocuPen coming back when I have done my research on what I really need.
There is something written on a wall which interests me. I just take my DocuPen and scan it.
I walk through a store. See something interesting for a friend and scan the title / specifications to later hand her over.
I’m sitting an a restaurant. There are some very interesting combinations of meals. I take out my DocuPen and scan them so that I memorize them when I want to make them on my own.
I have document laying in front of me of which I need an expertise. I am not at home. I use my DocuPen to scan it. Take my laptop and my cell phone to fax it to a friend then waiting for his call.
I’m archiving the serial numbers of my gear. Instead of making errors by writing them off I just use my DocuPen and scan them. It even works on the bowed but plain surface of my guitar.
While being an a train travel I had a nice conversation with a woman. When I have to leave the train I see her writing her phone number on the windows not very readable and mirrored too. As the train is about to leave I still was able to scan over it with my DocuPen. Hopefully I can decipher it later.
I step by a shop. It’s closed. The opening times are complicated not very intuitive. I just use my DocuPen and scan them.
A device in our computer room died. I just go down use the DocuPen to scan its serial number and back on my desk I file the RMA.
I am in a store willing to buy something for my work at home. I wasn’t aware that there doesn’t seems to be a real standard and that the product is available in tons of different sizes all being shown in their catalogue. I scan the page with the sizes go home and measure what I really need.
My boss shows me the new road map with dates and asks me when I will be able to step in for a colleague. I just take out my DocuPen scan the map on his wall telling him that I will get back to my desk comparing them with my schedule and letting him know fitting available slots.
Colleagues arguing about a mathematical equation on the board. When I come in to say goodbye they ask me for my opinion. Unfortunately I have a splitting headache and can’t really help them. But I promise to get back to them with my opinion as soon as I can think again scanning the equation with my DocuPen for later.
I am on an exhibition. Somebody tries to sell me the coolest and newest product ever. It sounds ok, but doesn’t do they always … Unfortunately so many people have been there that they are out of flyers. I scan the product spec sheet and verify and research back at work how cool it really is.
I’m into an ancient building with ancient documents. There are some interesting papers but late in the evening and in between it has become to dark to read them. I just use my DocuPen scanning the pages hoping that its own scanner light will produce a good enough output to read later.
I am stepping by a friend and she shows me a most recent picture of her daughter with her puppy. The picture is so nice I want to share it with my girl friend. Of course she wants to keep the picture for herself. No problem. I just take out the DocuPen and …
I am reading a book in a foreign language. Unfortunately I can’t understand everything. I scan the passages I do not understand for later looking them up.
I am to visit in an Asian country. When I walk around on my own I am stuck since I can’t decipher the writings and signs. I scan them. I see a photo with a headline on a paper which I can not decipher too. I scan it too and later ask my Asian friend which invited my what the writings meaning was.
There is something interesting which I want to scan … I just take out my DocuPen … and notice that the batteries are empty … I look for a pencil and have none … I now have to rely on my own memory as in good old times ;-)
Joe aka (Johannes.Lauer@freenet.de)
My name is Edward Schaefer and I am a 20-year-old college sophomore. I am an Economics major at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, CO, and to the best of my knowledge, I am the only student on campus with a tablet PC. I am on campus right now, and as I write this my backpack contains four textbooks (3 of which are hardback and in excess of 1000 pages, one is soft and around 500 pages) a copy of Candide by Voltaire, a 5-subject spiral notebook (because you never know when you’ll need to turn something in on a sheet of paper), an expandable file folder with many handouts in it, a graphing calculator, iPod, pens and pencils and flash memory drive. My laptop would be in there if I wasn't using it to write this.
Of my 5 classes, not a single one offers digital copies of handouts, readings, assignments, etc., and after spending many hours online looking, writing e-mails and making message board posts, I was unable to obtain digital copies of any of my textbooks.
The reason I sold my old laptop in order to purchase a tablet late last year, was the simple fact that I have poor organizational skills, and had a tendency to lose handouts, worksheets and the like. Last semester a couple of my classes would post digital copies of everything and I would immediately put it onto my tablet. Last semester my grades actually improved because of the increased organization and functionality my tablet gave me.
I've been looking into pen-based and book scanners to try to help keep me on this new fast track to organization and better grades, but as a full-time college student don't have the money to actually afford any of these things. If I were to win this DocuPen RC800 it would help me out in so many ways, from reducing the number of books and papers I have to carry each day, it would be a life saver to be able to scan in the chapter we would be going over that day in class into my tablet so I don't have to take the whole book with me, to keeping me more organized by allowing me to scan handouts, readings and worksheets immediately, and completely eliminate any opportunity to lose or misplace anything that is important for my class.
Furthermore, I am required to write a few papers this year and my school library has a fairly extensive collection of academic journals, which are not available to be checked out. It would be wonderful to be able to look up an article in a particular journal, and scan it into my computer. It would save time in the library and create a simpler task in outlining, highlighting, taking notes and citing the article.
I know there are probably many, many students on here who have a similar story to mine, but something I would like to mention is the number of people I interact with on a daily basis because I use a tablet. People are always asking me about it in classes or at the library, and are always curious about my experience in having a tablet. I always tell people I love having a tablet and how much easier it makes my life, but I can't help admit to them that handouts pose a serious problem that I can't work around. If I had a DocuPen RC800, my recommendations to people about switching to a tablet PC could be stronger and even more sincere, not to mention MY love for tablets would increase 10 fold.
Thank you for your time,
Edward Schaefer
Edward.J.Schaefer@gmail.com
JimP
engineer -at- entermail -dot- net
http://wickedstageact2.typepad.com/life_on_the_wicked_stage_/2006/02/what_would_i_do.html
Try this and scroll down an entry or two.
http://wickedstageact2.typepad.com/
OK, I wasn't going to post an entry to this, but since Warner did I will :)
What would I do with a DocuPen RC800? Save the world! No, I'm serious. Give me a Docupen RC800 and I can singlehandedly start to save the world. Without one, we're all doomed.
I'll explain. Tablet evangelism is relatively easy. Just walk into a meeting where people are shuffling piles of paper and sit down quietly with the tablet in prominant view and you can almost guarantee the questions that will follow. "Is that a Tablet PC?", "How, that's slick - how's it work?" etc etc.
Ultimately though people feel that a Tablet PC is a neat thing, but not something they can fit into their lifestyle. "I simply have too much paper". "I can't convince everyone to send me electronic documents". "If only my workflow was more 'electronic' that would be great for me'.
Well, with an RC800 people would hand me papers in meetings, I'd make a big deal about scanning them, right there and then, and then hand the documents back. "Thanks for that - please recycle this".
Ultimately people would start to question what I'm doing, so I'd show them. They'd see digital ink AND digital renditions of paper documents. They'd start to realize that a digital workflow is possible. They'd start to realize that they don't need to process stacks of paper all the time, that perhaps there are other ways to work. They'd then buy Tablet PC's, buy their own RC800s and ultimately pay it forward.
The net result of course is that within a couple of years my paperless activism would result in a 95% drop in demand for paper (don't panic, we'll figure out how to give everyone in the paper industries jobs later - Utopia never has any problems). The rain forests would remain standing. Trees would stay alive all over the world, doing the great job othey do of reprocessing carbon dioxide and generally cleaning the place up.
With everyone now working digitally for everything, and using their own RC800s to evangelize digital workflow to anyone that's not, more people would start to work at home, using the Internet to communicate with co-workers. Fuel usage, pollution from cars, traffic congestion and ultimately traffic deaths would drop drastically.
Stress levels would tumble, and with them crime, divorce, unhappiness and all that bad stuff.
Ultimately, everyone would live much happier, caring lives with more time for friends and family.
The world would be saved from itself!
And all because you gave me an RC800 scanner :)
The other main advantage is the ability to capture ink from non-tablet users instantly. In terms of collaboration and note making, being able to swipe a pen over a few pages of handwritten notes could save me the trouble of meeting up to exchange and return notes, and the expense of xeroxing them... resulting in a near 100% digital workflow.
I teach a vvariety of subjects at college. Most of the courses I teach have good digital resources available (such as programming a networking). However I also teach an electricity course (Industrial Maintenance program) where the materials really aren't any different than those that were available 20 (or more) years ago. I am trying to change that (since the students grew up using the web they expect to receive things this way) and am converting many resources that until I came along were (at the highest end) available for an overhead projector (OHP). There are however many things I would like to include that crop up when I am nowhere near a flatbed scanner. Being able to take the scanner with me would help immensely.
The second thing I would do is to digitize some of the materials "handed in" by students. I don't currently do it now, for the same reasons I cited above.
The third thing I would use such a device for is ad-hoc map scanning. I have an older Garmin GPS (12XL) which works fine. I use it with a few different computer applications, sometimes while driving. There have been numerous instances when I don't (either through bad planning, time restraints, or simple goof-ups) have a digital copy of a map where I am, but I've got a paper copy in the glove compartment (or I can stop at a gas station and buy one). It would be great to be able to scan portions in - while still on the road (figuratively speaking).
Jim Ronholm
ronholmj@canadorec.on.ca
For the past 5 years, Quicktionary (http://www.wizcomtech.com/Wizcom/products/product_info.asp?fid=80) has been in stasis. It's only able to convert Roman to non-Romanized script, not the other way around.
The need for Chinese, Japanese, Tibetan, or other exotic script translators is huge and unmet. If a learner is trying to read an unknown Chinese character, the process of identifying just a single unfamiliar character routinely takes on the order of a half an hour with a dictionary in hand.
It's no use going into detail on this, but the problem is in essence that (1) there's no correspondence between characters and phonetics, and (2) there's no easy way to find the 'radical' under which the character is actually indexed in current dictionaries. That means that reading can only proceed at the pace at which one invests in memorizing characters beforehand. There's no way to learn a language by pouring over found reading materials that are of real interest to the learner. For the most user-friendly model of current Chinese language dictionaries, visit zhongwen.com
Of course, a scanner capable of looking up scripts like this would have to have a fairly sophisticated character recognition diagnostic suite built in, because fonts can radically distort the look of characters on a page. (For online character translation, the process is much easier because of the underlying coding for each character, but few companies have exploited that angle either.)
But think of the potential.... Cutting the time to translate just one unfamiliar character down from half an hour to a millisecond?
One billion people speak Chinese. We Westerners aren't savvy enough to speed up the learning process? Comparatively, the Chinese economy will have a lot easier time making up for the language barrier than we will ... until we get over ourselves and make this one basic software jump.
In the meantime, the RC800 will do just fine for all of our Anglocentric preoccupations.
Impatiently yours,
Marty
I am a high school senior going to college this year, and of course this would be a great device for me as I step into the crazy life of college studying (Probably going to UC Berkeley). So here's a few things that would cut down some time for me with the RC800:
1. Another item to show-off, of course. Not the most important, but it's there and everyone will do it. One of the many perks of having high-tech devices.
2. Ability to scan practically anything I see is great, since I don't know when I will need to take a print of something. So having a mobile scanner would be great to carry around.
3. Handouts, magazine article, anything relatively short can be scanned and not having to copied right off the bat or make a note and come back later.
4. Share work with other people. With a physical copy of my written notes/homework, I can only pass them around one at a time. But with a scanner, I can just send it to everyone instantaneously in class.
5. When someone show me a picture, I can keep a copy of it with the RC800. Great especially with the volumes of pictures girls tend to carry with them...
6. When I go buy stuff, I usually just toss away the receipt because it's not that big of a purchase and keeping a small piece of paper is quite troublesome as they can add up in my pockets and I've to toss them out anyway. But with the RC800, I can scan them and toss them away as I please and still have a copy of it on my hard drive. Great for keeping tab of my spending.
7. Of course, it will give me a chance to send it to my tablet and show others how useful a tablet pc is and encourage them to purchase one in the future.
That should sum up all the uses I will actually do with it, thanks for this chance to win such an expensive item, as a student like myself just can't shell out $299 for a high tech device like this. Good luck to all.
Andy Lin
Chronicles24[@]gmail[.]com
I would no longer rely on photocopy machines, making a copy of that all important memo would be a flick of a pen away!
I would rely less on my memory,
making a note of a web site in a magazine would be a flick of a pen away!
I would spend less time rewriting other people's notes, copying them for future reference would be a flick of a pen away!
That's how my digital lifestyle would be, everything now a flick of the pen!
email: airsoft_snake/AT/hotmail.com
First of all, thank you for your generosity and for supporting the movement toward a paperless and environmental friendly society. Every little effort counts.
How would a pen based scanner like the RC800 impact your digital lifestyle? I am also a student and would much appreciate this RC800 scanner. Here is my situation: Starting September, I will be attending an abroad school where it is in a third word setting. The expected duration will be two years. There will be many challenges and hurdles to overcome. To start with, traveling from the US to the school will limit the amount of items I can carry. Thus, the idea of bringing along a traditional bulky and heavy scanner is out of the question. Once there, there is a library but very limited in resources -- equipments and loaning out written resources. Books and journals at the library are loan out not by days but by hours basis.
Perhaps, we shouldn’t even try to compare, but just for the heck of it, technology/equipment availability in this third world country is no where close to what we may have in a minimal equipped junior college in the US. To my understanding, currently, there are no scanners of any kind (school’s provision, that is) available for students to use. There are two copy machines but often break down due to age and over use by the entire student body, let alone the expensive cost in using such limited equipments.
My hope is to be as prepared for a digital lifestyle as possible. A few of my preparation to minimize the difficulties associated with these challenges include saving enough to purchase a moderately priced tablet pc, some kind of voice recognition software, and some sort of pen scanner. With regards to the later, I have looked at the iris pen scanners, but these have their own limitation in that they can only scan line by line, let alone the inability to scan a figure. There was no real practical way to adequately prepare until I saw this DocuPen RC800 scanner contest.
The DocuPen RC800 scanner will no doubt have a tremendous impact to my digital lifestyle and that of my classmates who may chose such a lifestyle. I can quickly scan written resources both from the library and/or handouts from the professors. From there, there are numerous benefits. Additionally, the potential positive impact of the DocuPen RC800 will extend beyond those who may have a tablet pc or a laptop; it will indirectly help the rest of the student body. How? There will be at least one less student lining up either for the limited copy machines and/or library books and journals -- that is once I scanned what I need, these resources are then quickly returned and ready for other waiting fellow students. Of course, the potential for sharing such scanned documents are there for those who may wish.
After two years of study, no doubt there will be documents that I would like to keep and bring home. The DocuPen RC800 would definitely allow me to bring home such valuable documents, but not in binders of printed materials.
In closing, as an poor and indebted student trying to prepare to go abroad, your DocuPen RC800 will directly make a huge difference in my digital lifestyle and indirectly the lives of my to be classmates. Also, if chosen as the recipient, I would be happy to share my personal experiences with the RC800 here at your blog or wherever most people would most benefit. Here is my contact information: cleeheal(at)yahoo.com
Once again, thank you for your bigheartedness. Whoever receives the RC800 would no doubt be much blessed and well deserved. Best wishes to all.
C. Lee
Carl.Strickland at vxnerve.com
I work for a fortune 100 and travel the majority of the time.
I can now scan my receipts every night even when I chose to watch TV instead of do e-mail. At the end of the month I can download my receipts and e-mail them and my expense statement back to the home office.
No more late fees on my corporate card that I have to eat even though I am half a world away. I can't think of any other way to do this. I could even do expenses on a plane sitting in the back none-the-less.
I would love to give it a try. If it works on our locked down PCs that are jump drive compatible, you may have an IT Architect evangilizing. I probably would not want to pay out of pocket to prove it worked though.
Pick me please!
merritt.chandler@gmail.com
Plus I've never won a contest before so I'd be totally stoked. :) Thanks for considering - Jesse S.
spicyitalian739@gmail.com
I guess the biggest impact would be the WOW factor, with the people who see you use the scanner, but for me the most important impact would be accountability, my business is commercial construction, so I’m often in the field where we are often ordered or asked for change orders, so they (Construction Manager) scribble on any piece of paper we can find what it is they want to change in the project, to speed up the change order process which can take up to two weeks, and with this portable scanner I’m thinking I can scan the changes with the sketches as well as make who ever it is that is asking for the changes in the project to sign and that way make them accountable for any changes in the projects budget, and archiving the scanned images in the projects file. Thanks for your time; this is a good thing you are doing.
areyes at gmail dot com.
seyeklopz on msn
Ah! a magic wand. It sure beats the old days of having to scan with a black and white cctv camera and three color filters!
Apart from the boring stuff of scanning the endless business cards and customer technical requirements, this will finally stop me from stealing beer mats from bars!
No more sodden pieces of cardboard,I can go paperless and scan them in full 24-bit color.(Just a quick wipe first)
Also, no more wi-fi war driving, here comes war scanning :)
grantDOTcaleyATntlworldDOTcom
>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
brian *AT* nerdlife *DOT* net
As a tablet ink addict, I can use One Note and Outlook to be nearly paperless. I can take my notes in ink, annotate other people's documents in Word, even use the Print to One Note powertoy to mark up PDFs or attachments.
But at meetings you still get saddled with those handouts or printouts of slideshows that you end up writing all over then have to transcribe. How much cooler to have a device you could have with you right there in the meeting to grab important bits from the paper documents to drop into your One Note document...
I keep thinking of it like the Snipping Tool for the tablet, only for the real world. Someone shows me an interesting article in the newspaper at lunch? Scan the interesting bits on the spot. A friend shows me a book I want to read? Scan the ISBN so I can remember it. Someone makes a sketch I want to remember on a document they need to keep? Digitally snip it out and take it with me.
And best of all, everything I grab ends up in my tablet, were I can paste and manipulate it to my heart's content.
Wow. What a concept.
willi.augurin@verizon.net
(see, I need something that will help me remeber things)
As a student of industrial design I cannot imagine living with out my tablet pc. I am constantly on the go and where ever I may be headed my tablet is with me, a constant creative companion helping me to realize and illustrate my ideas. I am constantly using it to sketch, design layouts, create 3d models and most importantly communicate. However, as great of a thing as the tablet is to my work flow and creativity I am still not able to fully realize total mobility in my digital creative work. I am hampered by the fact that there are mountains of paper that I must either scan or bring with me. From sketches I make by hand on the way to school, the sketches of students working on the same project to the massive amounts of reference material that I scan from magazines, books and newspapers I must bring to a traditional fixed scanner. For me this means lugging the material half way across campus or back to my house for scanning, which to me defeats the purpose of mobile technologies. The RC800 would revolutionize the way in which I work, allowing me to effortlessly scan a drawing and begin work immediately , helping me amass the reference material I need at the library, and most importantly help to take ideas from a group project and integrate them into the process live with out a break in the synergistic creative energy of a meeting. The RC800 is not only a beautifully crafted piece of technology but the missing piece in what is an almost fully realized mobile digital life style.
M.Ripp
drmutiny@gmail.com
I fell in love with Tablet PCs in the summer of 2004 and have been obsessed with them ever since. I am a sophomore college student and entrepreneur. My HP TC4200 has been great in helping me in both of the areas mentioned.
In school, it seems as though the entire community is apathetic to advancements in technology unless the technology goes mainstream (MTV says it’s cool). Tablet PCs are not an exception to this trend. On a campus of 13,500 people, there may be 100 Tablet PC users. My friends, my professors, and other administrators all tend to complain about the same problems that the Tablet PC solves. The problem colleges face is that as someone acquires more knowledge that person tends to got through a rainforest worth of paper and books. It is a daunting challenge to organize and store all of the paper associated with acquiring knowledge. With my Tablet PC I have found this task easier than ever before. I do all of my homework and record all of my notes on my Tablet PC. I am able to reference this work with ease because of the great handwriting search capabilities. Although the ability to do all this with my Tablet PC is already a great boon, I feel like I would want to do more with it. My books literally (no pun intended) occupy a quarter of my tiny dorm room. With a scanner I would be able to go fully paperless reducing the clutter in my room and allowing me to recycle a huge load of paper. The DocuPen’s size makes it ideal for a college student since dorms do not afford a large amount of space for a student. Students have to scan in class or at the library. It would be impossible to do this with the regularity required in college.
I quixotically call myself an entrepreneur but I am more of an advocate. I am convinced of the numerous benefits increased use of state of the art technology can offer society. I offer consulting services to small businesses, teaching proprietors how to make business process more efficient and bottom-line friendly through the use of technology like Tablet PCs. My passion though is to show my classmates how new technology works so that they can adopt it for themselves. My latest endeavor has been to start a school chartered technology club that seeks to illustrate the conveniences of technology as its guiding principle. Through this club, I hope to start a student-led grassroots movement to put pressure on our college to reduce its use of paper, to increase its use of technology, and to eventually go paperless. So far, I have had trouble acquiring technology to demonstrate. A DocuPen would be a perfect tool to demonstrate and allow the members of the club to use and spread the word about.
A pen based scanner like the RC800 would impact my digital lifestyle by allowing me to further reduce paper waste in my own life and to introduce this technology to people at my college with whom I hope to reduce paper waste throughout the entire campus.
Best,
Gabe
gmg28@cornell.edu
However, the examples and practice problems in the books and handouts are the hard parts. I want to include some examples in my notes to help me understand, but rewriting the questions and solutions is inefficient and often introduces mistakes, especially most of the questions have circuit diagrams in them.
A portable full-page scanner, such as the RC800, would be my best solution. It is light and can scan the whole width of a page, allowing me to import examples and circuit diagrams into my notes when I need them. The RC800 has the advantage of being able to scan in colour, hence the coloured diagrams would show up in my notes in the way they should be.
Having said that, this solution is nowhere within reach as my money has to go towards food and rent, and spending $299 on a gadget is too much of a luxury for me, especially after the purchase of my Tablet PC.
Ken
freelongd1(AT)yahoo(dot)com
First, it will cut down the space usage on my desk. Second, instead of using my camera to do a page capture away from my computer, I can actually use docupen to do the job when I need it. Third, it is all about mobility, and DocuPen fits that category.
Cheers,
Yusri
wdphish_AT_yahoo_DOT_com
My reply: I'm a graphic designer, so I find lots of inspiration from the world around me. Having the RC800 would mean I would be able to scan many of those inspirations. Be it a pattern on a waiting room sofa or restaurant floor, a creative way of scanning things to make them look "funky", or just trying crazy new things, it would boost my creativity, even during a brain fizzle, and allow me to bring new art and new ideas to life (okay, fine, to the computer screen and print).
With the pen not needing to be hooked up to the computer to scan things to memory (great idea!), I can use it practically anyplace without having to bring and/or startup my Tablet PC there before scanning the object. This means I can be walking down the street with the RC800 in my bag (it's large enough to fit the length of this pen), pull it out, scan something, and continue on my way.
I knew someone a couple years ago who would use his digital camera to take photos of interesting, catchy, or unique advertising signs/posters/billboards he came across in his travels. He'd use the photos in his sermons to illustrate a point. This is where I got the idea from, just so you know it's not completely original! *Grin*
I love to scan 3D objects, and have done so with flatbed scanners in the past, and think using a pen would definitely create some great new art!
I can't afford such a "toy" myself as my disability has kept me from working most of the time. Now that I have my new laptop (Tablet) I will be able to work more as I can work from home when I need to. This device is far off my radar for things I need/would like to purchase once I have pay coming in, such as a particular printer and a colorimeter and, unrelated to computers, a special type of harness for my service dog (better for my needs than what I use now).
I do hope you don't think I'm telling you this as a sob story or anything, I just felt I needed to explain why a graphic designer would not have the funds to purchase such a tool, since normally one would!
(If chosen as the winner, I would take the Crimson Pearl color 'cause I think it's the prettiest one [yes, I'm female *grin*]. Also, you would not have to send the book/CD combo, but if you still wanted to, I would find them a good home. Perhaps, though, you can give them to a runner-up in this contest instead.)
Thanks for taking the time to read all these posts! Wow!!
~ Eagle4031
C M T S 8 0 C M [AT] p r o d i g y [DOT] n e t
Also, as others have mentioned, there is the cool factor. As a teacher, I need all the cool I can get with the students. By now they are used to my tablet, so I need a new infusion of cool (although I know that ultimatly any such attempt will be short-lived at best)
aadamsATlebanon.k12.nh.us
It'll be great being able to scan reference books at the library instead of making photocopies to bring home.
I can also see it being useful for scanning friends' photographs without having to borrow them.
e-mail: qixosajitra[at]mighty.co.za
I can also see it coming in handy for just moving as much of my life as possible into the digital realm.
Anyways, great contest and very generous of you!
imcgrady1@mac.com
abcortiz@comcast.net
Once I saw what the DocuPen R800 offers I new right away it would salve all My problems (I'm not kidding!). Such a portable scanner really solves the only issue I had with tablets- the interface with other people who still use paper...
Other comments describe this quite well, so I'm going to tell you how this device will impact my digital lifestyle from a different angle. I'll tell you my story Without referring directly to the Tablet PC I'm getting but it is clear that the combined effect is many times greater...
My story is so typical of me...
Since it is a bit long, I've posed it as a seperate text file here:
http://hyperupload.com/download/5812a339/DocuPen.txt.html
Thanks for the opportunity!
Gil
gildoc1 /#/ AT /$*/ yahoo.com
regards
Gail
My professional work would also be greatly assisted since I do a lot of field work where travelling light and compact is of importance.
I use a lot of colour material (maps for example) so the colour capability is also a big plus.
At conference when persons have single copies of papers it would be possible to borrow the paper and scan it quickly rather than having to rely on the "I'll email/send you a copy" to come through.
The possibilities are endless!
tedwards@email.com
TE
From a responsible user position as well, the DocuPen RC800 would help me conserve a lot of the material I use which dates back to the 1700s and 1800s. This type of scanning would minimise movement of the volumes and paper while giving me copies and images that I can work with and therefore prevent repeated handling of the material since I could work with the digital copies.
My professional work would also be greatly assisted since I do a lot of field work where travelling light and compact is of importance.
I use a lot of colour material (maps for example) so the colour capability is also a big plus.
At conferences when persons have single copies of papers it would be possible to borrow the paper and scan it quickly rather than having to rely on the "I'll email/send you a copy" to come through. In fact just about anywhere that you need to capture information repidly and be able to access it after this device would be a big help. Think of less Post It notes and random pieces of paper.
The possibilities are endless!
tedwards@email.com
TE
Sincerly,
Sonia Armas
miss_jae80@ladyfire.com
First, I just wanna say that it was mere luck that brought me over your blog as I was looking for slate tablet pc pictures, so I hope i'd be lucky enough to get this scanner
I'm currently a student, an Egyptian student. I got into the habit of taking my notes digitally in lectures after I got my tablet pc. After a while i thought why not having my text books as well and perform the OCR so I'd be really the first " digitalized " student in the whole campus. And I have to say that with the regular scanner it worked just fine. But the problem that I faced was that I had to photocopy the text book first so i could be able to scan it properly cause when I tried to scan the text book pages i just got less accurate results in the OCR and I couldn't search the text well.
So, after doing some web research I came across this pen-based scanner, and it was just what I needed to take my digital experience to the next level. So, if i got it , I won't face the same problem with scanning my text books or the even the text books in the library ( which for some reason I can't borrow them out of the library) so, getting this would be much help for me.
The 2 problems that stopped me from getting my own pen-based scanner is, 1)it is expensive price ( well, $299 worth about 1,725 Egyptian Pound, which is the price of a brand new whole computer ) and 2) I don't have much experience about buying online and the shipping and whether there would be added taxes or whatever
Anyway, thanks for the competition
Name: Ahmed Gamal Aldeeb
My email is: ahmedgaldeeb@yahoo.com
Country: Egypt
Tom Carson
Thanks , Denny
I have to scan several textbooks because I allow the person being tutored to choose which book they want to use in case they have one for a class. my email is jeremyhbullard@hotmail.com to confirm my ministry shoot me an email and I'll give you the password to my website. please remove this comment if I am not chosen
This is such a nice blog one thing is most common in your blog is that Data processing services are helpful in streamlining a wide range of corporate.Thanks for this nice post.
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