Torquil Macdonald S?rensen <torquil at gmail.com> writes: > Ok, thanks. And I guess the "sane-find-scanner" just tries to identify > any scanner connected to the system, regardless of sane supporting it or > not.
You guessed correctly. > Then I will try some more to get the 32-bit iscan program working on the > 64-bit computer with 64-bit ubuntu. I'd rather not have to install a > separate chroot'ed 32-bit OS. You can either use the chroot'ed approach you mention or set up a mixed 32/64-bit environment. Note that iscan-2.12.0 adds 64-bit support but in the source code package only. You will have to build your own binaries, but that should be as simple as dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -D -b However, the Epson Perfection V200 Photo requires a DFSG non-free binary-only interpreter plugin which is not yet available for 64-bit architectures :-( > m. allan noah wrote: >> There is no backend in cvs for this machine. If you cannot get >> satisfaction from the epkowa software, perhaps you could offer a >> bounty or hardware for reverse engineering? That, or wait until our 64-bit packages come out of the QA pipeline. >> allan >> >> On Sat, Nov 1, 2008 at 12:11 PM, Torquil Macdonald S?rensen >> <torquil at gmail.com> wrote: >>> Hi! >>> >>> I have a 64bit computer with Ubuntu 8.04 on it, and I'm trying to get an >>> Epson Perfection V200 Photo to work. >>> >>> Could I ask what the significance is of why sane-find-scanner finds my >>> scanner, but not scanimage -L ? >>> >>> libsane-extras in installed, and this is ubuntu 8.04. I have tried >>> various methods, e.g. installing the iscan* packages from avansys, by >>> using the --force-architecture option on the dpkg command, after having >>> converted the rpm's to debs. Hope this helps, -- Olaf Meeuwissen, LPIC-2 FLOSS Engineer -- AVASYS Corporation FSF Associate Member #1962 Help support software freedom http://www.fsf.org/jf?referrer=1962