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This company is a pack of thieves. The refuse to honor a $140.00 rebate and ripped off hundreds of customers. I was lucky and was able to return this crap to my retailer after wizzcom screwed everyone. STAY AWAY FROM THESE PARASITES.
I had the same communication problem I found the solution on the web "Just got it working :) Make sure the plug is pushed in to the pen until you hear and feel a click (don't just rely on it looking all the way in, you really have to push it quite firmly). It now works on both XP and Vista. Hope this helps."(.).
I purchased the pen to scan numbers only. I truly lost my patience trying to make this work. In fact, if the pen acts like a drunk.
NOT. So my pen, after a generous probationary period and attempts to rehabilitate is being returned to send never to come back to this house again under any circumstance. That should be simple enough.
Not only cannot not copy numbers, just simple numbers, the software staggers like a bar fly constantly missing the stool, but foolish enough not to know it. The accuracy rate for the pen was about 20%. I could have made better hand written notes drunk.
It is a very bad pen. The designers need to go back to the drawing board sober this time.
So, I uninstalled and reinstalled the driver and desktop program twice from the disk and once from the wizcomtech.com downloadable files. I found especially that the ends of lines scanned badly because (without realizing it)as I crossed the page I would tilt the pen instead of moving my hand.This product isn't perfect and will make some errors no matter what you do, but it is far better and more useful than I had hoped. Okay, I know it sounds dumb and obvious, but if you can't get the pen to communicate with your PC, make sure to push the cable jack is pushed in completely. It went "click" and all was well from there. It also sometimes has trouble reading modern typefaces that are in italics or a bit large. I was convinced the program wasn't installed properly (especially because of the little white and blue icon in the top left of the title bar which usually shows up when a program is not responding). When I get a line that scans poorly, if I scan it a second time and focus more on going slowly and holding the pen correctly nine times out of ten it comes out much better.
I also use a lot of primary documents from the early modern period and earlier and the pen can actually occasionally read some of that text as well. I have a film background and am used to using a variety of cables and electronic devices, so when I read the advice in the help section of the desktop program about checking the jack and the batteries I thought yeah, yeah I'm not an idiot. It is better than other text recognition software I've used and so convenient for taking notes for graduate school from library books I can't write in. Finally I looked at the help file again and tried pushing the jack in more. Believe me, even if you're conviced the jack is in all the way, push it in harder until you hear a distinct "click."Also, to reiterate what others have said, the innacurate text recognition is almost always due to scanning too fast or not holding the pen at the appropriate angle. I didn't really intend to use it for that type of work anyway and I wouldn't recommend it for text pre 19th/18th century or so, but it's nice to know it may be possible in some instances. It's a bit hit or miss if you go outside standard typefaces, but for most body text of books and magazines it's great.
Even after the supposed training of the pen, out of 20 scans it did not completely recognize the text once. It is very position sensitive and the technology needs to be significantly improved.
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