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Author Topic: Hands on: Delicious Library 3 adds iOS barcode scanning, usage charts  (Read 458 times)
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« on: April 25, 2013, 11:01:07 pm »

Hands on: Delicious Library 3 adds iOS barcode scanning, usage charts
   




   

Delicious Library 3, the library organization application from Delicious Monster, debuted on Thursday. This latest update embraces Mountain Lion, and also features, for the first time, iOS integration. (Though some may remember that a previous Delicious Monster iOS app was pulled from the App Store in 2009, over a dispute with Amazon.)


If you’re not familiar with its predecessors—the last major version of which, Delicious Library 2, was launched in 2008—the app lets users organize and track their collections of books, movies, other media, and even tools. The easiest way to add an item to your libary is by holding its barcode up to your computer’s webcam for scanning, which enters pertinent information of the item, including a photo, to the “shelves” of your virtual library.

Users can see an analysis of their collection and its value.

That scanning can be hit-or-miss: Delicious Library 3 misidentified four of the first 10 books I scanned. You can re-scan the barcode; sometimes that will correct the problem and sometimes it won’t. (My wife’s copy of Monstrous Regiment by Terry Pratchett was finally correctly identified on the third try.) Otherwise, you can delete the entry and/or hand-enter the information—a painful slowdown when you’re getting used to the zippity-quick scanning process. Tempted as I was to chalk the misidentifications up to the relative obscurity of my wife’s collection, the books of mine that Delicious Library successfully scanned seemed to be equally obscure.


While Delicious Library 2 could be paired with a Bluetooth-enabled barcode scanner—like the ones you see at retail stores—the new edition offers integration with iOS devices: The free mobile app, Delicious Monster, pairs your iPhone or iPad with your computer over a Wi-Fi network. The app doesn’t retain any records—you can’t look at your library on your phone—but it can scan barcodes and transmit that info to your computer. That’s a particularly handy feature if you’re working from a Mac desktop, and don’t want to lug piles of books to be scanned using the webcam. A warning, though: Delicious Monster is built to be used only with iOS 6.1 or later.
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http://www.macworld.com/article/2036371/hands-on-delicious-library-3-adds-ios-barcode-scanning-usage-charts.html#tk.rss_all
   
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