hi all, I want to buy a couple of "barcode scanners" for the library. I saw koha is accepting 9 column alphanumeric barcodes both for books and patrons. I wonder what kind of barcode scanners are using in the libraries using KOHA. Could you please list me industry standards or properties of this barcode scanners. I will order barcode scanners according to these information. thanks and best regards Zeki Celikbas Librarian ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Istanbul Technical University e:mailto:celikbas@itu.edu.tr Faculty of Aero. & Astro. w:http://www2.itu.edu.tr/~celikbas 80626 Maslak Istanbul Turkey t:(212)2853108 f: (212)2853139 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
hi all,
I want to buy a couple of "barcode scanners" for the library. I saw koha is accepting 9 column alphanumeric barcodes both for books and patrons. I wonder what kind of barcode scanners are using in the libraries using KOHA. Could you please list me industry standards or properties of this barcode scanners. I will order barcode scanners according to these information.
thanks and best regards Zeki Celikbas Librarian I have come to know that there are many different barcode formats. Code 39 is one that has been suggested to us - the theosophical society branch of palmerston north - and the securtary wants to register with
On Tue, 2001-10-16 at 02:00, Zeki Celikbas wrote: the National Library of New Zealand. This will extend the barcode to 12 alphanumbers. Will this work with Koha? Incidently, check places such as secondhand stores for barcode readers. I got an entire cash register and Symbol barcode memory phaser for $40 NZ. Why was it so cheap? The people who priced it did not know how to use it. They did not know its value. With this memory scanner, i can have the entire database in the palm of my hand. Stocktaking will be simplifed and Issues/returns and renewals will be able to be done away from the library computer. I can in fact program it to do what I want. Right now, its a handy digital clock. Symbol Memory Phaser P460 with one or two megabytes of memory. Attaches to the serial port, and Windows 98 can use the serial port much like a keyboard for input. Im sure linux could be rigged up that way, accepting input from both keyboard and serial port. Question is... how? Waylon Robertson IT manager, Theosophical Society Branch of Palmerston North
On Tue, Nov 13, 2001 at 10:29:32PM +1300, Waylon Robertson said:
I have come to know that there are many different barcode formats. Code 39 is one that has been suggested to us - the theosophical society branch of palmerston north - and the securtary wants to register with the National Library of New Zealand. This will extend the barcode to 12 alphanumbers. Will this work with Koha?
As far as I know, it'll be fine, but I'm sure Chris or Steve can speak with more authority than I.
Symbol Memory Phaser P460 with one or two megabytes of memory. Attaches to the serial port, and Windows 98 can use the serial port much like a keyboard for input. Im sure linux could be rigged up that way, accepting input from both keyboard and serial port.
Question is... how?
Bear in mind that barcode input is client side, and the server doesn't really care how you do it - it just expects characters to arrive in HTML forms. If you've got something on your client machine that can appear to type into text fields in IE, then it doesn't matter how it actually connects to the machine. So if you're using Win98 as your browsing platform, you're probably already sorted. If you're using Linux, then you're probably in for some exciting times ahead, if the barcode scanner is anything other than the keyboard wedge style. Cheers Si -- Simon Blake simon@katipo.co.nz Katipo Communications +64 21 402 004
participants (3)
-
Simon Blake -
Waylon Robertson -
Zeki Celikbas