> I would not (yet) call it a dead-end.
I didn't mean the whole scanner, just this approach to getting it
sorted.
> It just doesn't work for you at
> this point in time. It may very well be that a couple of tweaks here
> and there in the snapscan backend will make it work. Unfortunately, I
>
On Tue, 2004-01-13 at 11:54, Olaf Meeuwissen wrote:
> I meant to write -L, not ->, up there but I think you figured that
> much.
yep! Got it this time,
>
> > Same old, same old.
> > I just get No scanners were identified.
>
> Did you also update the firmware line near the top of snapscan.conf.
On Tue, 2004-01-13 at 09:50, Olaf Meeuwissen wrote:
> The file you are looking for is esfw3e.bin.
Graet! I got it. It was in a different place.
> SANE_DEBUG_SNAPSCAN=255 scanimage -> > debug.log
Same old, same old.
I just get No scanners were identified.
I am kind of getting the feeling it's
nce. I'd be happier if
I was getting some errors.
Julian.
>
> - -Oliver
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
> Version: GnuPG v1.2.2-rc1-SuSE (GNU/Linux)
>
> iD8DBQFAAV8x/V6sbrmfIuMRAnWqAJ9fqP+YuDyqG+0jEnbFAs6MtNMbXwCffAJP
> GhiyguWWkjD6DnEOEs5+VSE=
> =zEd0
> -END PG
On Wed, 2003-12-31 at 08:23, Karl Heinz Kremer wrote:
> The scanner uses three USB pipes: Two bulk pipes for input and output
> and one
> interrupt pipe. This means it's not a "standard" EPSON scanner (meaning
> that
> it cannot be supported by the EPSON backend). I don't know this device,
> it
Dear list,
I have just purchased an Epson scanner, model GT-7400U with the express
purpose of getting it to work under Linux. I had hoped it would work
since Epson was recommended and this is not a particularly advanced
model (1200dpi CCD 16bit in/out USB2.0 [EPSON Scan] PRINT image matching
II).