![]() When you’re ready, you simply launch the free software on the intended destination (a Windows or Mac computer, or an iOS or Android mobile device) to initiate the wireless transfer. It can store up to 4GB of scans, so you don’t have to transfer them right away. The Eye-Fi card that comes bundled with the Xerox Mobile Scanner was created for the product. And it doesn’t need a preexisting Wi-Fi network either, as it can create a direct connection to any other Wi-Fi-enabled device.Ĭreated by Visioneer (which offers a similar but not identical product under its own brand), the Xerox Mobile Scanner innovates primarily in its use of an Eye-Fi SD Card–a gadget best known for both storing images and functioning as a Wi-Fi adapter, enabling the wireless transfer of images captured by a digital camera. It can do all of that for up to 300 pages (according to Xerox) without being connected to electrical power, assuming that you’ve fully charged its internal battery. About the size of a roll of aluminum foil and weighing about 1.5 pounds, this $250 (as of March 8, 2012) sheet-fed scanner can turn printed items into PDFs or JPGs, and then send them wirelessly to a PC, a mobile device, or the Web in a matter of seconds. If you need to digitize printed documents or photos while on the go, the Xerox Mobile Scanner fits the bill–and it does so with a twist.
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