In reply to:
See... to me, the whole idea of a networked scanner misses the point that you still have to walk up to the thing to put stuff into it. So what's the point of controlling it across the network if you still have to walk up to the thing to get the job done.
By this logic Tony, I take it a networked printer would also be "missing the point"?
As you would have to "walk up to it" to get the end results [a printout], and if printing on special paper, to load it with the right paper stock first before you printed?
We have 2 networked printers in our office (one colour, one mono), both HP Laserjets, and wouldn't have them setup any other way.
To give everyone their own personal printers (unless they do specific, high security printing, like maybe payroll or other 'for your eyes only' type work), is a major headache to manage.
Been there, done that.
Can't see that scanners are much different.
Most half-decent scanners now support ADF feeders so if you're doing bulk "loose sheet" or page scanning, it works like a fax and pulls each sheet through as its scanned, if not, then you're doing manual "feeds" of each page before you copy it - just like a manual photcopier requires.
I'm considering a scanner for home use and it will one of the networkable ones so it can be attached to any device and operated remotely.
Yes, it will be attached next to one PC that will do most of the scanning, but for one off/occasional scanning - having to walk to another room to load a single page you want to scan is hardly a major issue.
If you're doing lots and lots of scanning in multiple locations then it would be best to either get a networkable scanner [assuming you have a wired/wireless network in place - who on this BBS doesn't these days?], or get a second scanner and plug it in locally.
Low-end [i.e. non-networkable] scanners are pretty cheap these days if the second scanner option is the simplest one in this case.
You can also get a USB "switch" to switch the scanners USB connection from local PC to the remote PC, assuming you have a "extended distance" USB cable/repeater between the remote PC and the USB switch box - this is basically a wired network, but of USB devices instead of Ethernet ones.