I couldn't find any official software from Fujitsu, but I found the drivers eventually, so ended up coming up with connecting the scanner to the Pi over USB and glueing the bits together to drop the PDFs onto the samba share I had to dig for the drivers, Fujitsu didn't have the right ones for my model on their website! linux compatible, as I wanted to connect it to a Pi. no desktop machine required and experience needs to be friction free as the headless part means the only way to interact with the scanning function is to press 1 buttonĢ. This works fine on say, a Mac, with the official Fujitsu ScanSnap software, and I'm guessing _that_ supports saving to a samba share, but I wanted a solution that'sġ. I'm not sure how I would do that on my model (ScanSnap S1300i), it connects over USB and has no touchscreen/control interface or network port, or wifi capability, you have to connect it to a computer via USB. That classifier is too darn nice, plus its smart rules, plus its scriptability, plus multi-device sync, plus Markdown notes with wiki links to stored docs, plus a thousand other niceties. It’s working pretty well so far, and I may stick with it.īut if I were to go back to an app, it would be DEVONthink or something with most of its features. My ScanSnap scanner’s software does OCR, so by the time docs land in the inbox folder, they’re ready for automated processing. Lately, as an experiment, I’ve been playing with organizing my docs with Johnny Decimal, then using the Hazel app to sort known docs with fixed structures (think bank statements and the like) into the right folders. Is it? This looks like the older dog’s veterinarian records. Is it? This looks like kid #2’s school stuff. It has the UI equivalent of “this looks like 2023 state taxes. DT will suggest folders based on how closely the new file matches the contents of those folders. With DT, say you’ve scanned or saved 20 docs to your inbox and you want to sort them to their long-term homes. This is nifty, but seems to lack to one thing that keeps me coming back to DEVONthink: a learning classifier.
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