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Still, the Scanner Pro App is an incredibly inexpensive way to scan receipts and short documents on the go and can likely replace a dedicated model for many people. Read more: Scanner Pro App review It takes about 20 seconds to scan and save a document using the Scanner Pro App.
The Berkeley Scanner brings timely, comprehensive crime and safety news to Berkeley, CA. Editor-in-chief: Award-winning veteran news reporter Emilie Raguso. Timely, comprehensive crime and public safety news for Berkeley, CA.
The Scanner Pro App is a perfect alternative for those who don't want to invest a lot of space and cash into building a home office. It is ideal for scanning a few 1-10 page documents per month or a handful of important receipts that you want to digitize and preserve for tax time.
Added: Ability to run scanner without channel analyser. Fixed: When scanner was stopped, some code was left running which continued to consume CPU cycles (6% for me). Added: On SDR# start-up, the Frequency scanner plug-in will backup the 'scanner_entryes.xml' to 'scanner_entryes.xml.bak'.
I encourage you to try out Scanner Screen and share your thoughts, suggestions, and bug reports. Together, we can make Scanner Screen an even better tool for the Uniden scanner community. If you find Scanner Screen useful, please consider starring the project on GitHub and sharing it with fellow scanner enthusiasts.
Maybe you should have a look at this part of RadioReference. You could determine bands of interest yourself with the scanner plug-in by starting with large scan ranges then narrowing them once you determine (via logs) where the activity is occurring and then further again when you find the ones are the most interest to you.
The scanner plug in is already in the nightly build, Once you open SDR++, you scroll down to "modules" then scanner, then in the blank box to the LEFT of Scanner type in a name for it, I suggest "scanner", then click "+" if I remember correctly.
To new listeners, or inexperienced listeners, the scanner school and videos like this are an introduction. The old farts aren't going to live forever. Reactions: Omega-TI , mitbr , ladn and 2 others
Another RS scanner I really liked was the Pro43. It had great coverage, especially that it covered the Mil-Air band which was important to me at the time. It was also relatively tiny, so it was easy to carry in a shirt pocket when plane-watching at the local military airfields. In general, there were some things I liked about RS scanners.
You can have one scanner to scan programmed known frequencies and another to do search to find unknown ones. You can also use a SDR dongle at home doing a 2 sec search of the whole VHF air band but you usually have internal interferencies in a dongle and can be frustrating to use but a BCT15X just chugs along without any issues.