![]() As far as annoyances go, it’s pretty minor, but it still slowed me down, and it irritated me that it couldn’t just accurately read the UPC on the back to begin with.Īnother annoyance resides with the search function. And what do you know, it worked like a charm-of the hundreds of books I scanned last night, I got one false hit from using the UPC on the inside cover, but the rest of the time, it behaved beautifully. I was ready to stab a bitch.īut before the stabbings began, we asked tech support what the hell was up, and it turns out that if you scan the UPC in the inside front cover of the paperback, all is well-it’ll pull the right information. This had me incredulous at first-are you shitting me? Did these people have no idea how many MMPBs people buy and keep? The vast majority of my collection consists of MMPBs. This mofo was convinced that all my Neil Gaiman books were sparkly pink butterfly hairclips, and it flat-out couldn’t find the information for most of my science fiction and romance collection. And if you misenter something, deleting or undoing changes is a snap.įirst of all, if you’re scanning in mass market paperbacks and use the UPC on the back, it’s going to read the barcode, but it’s not going to pull up accurate information, if it can find anything at all. ![]() It’s all quite ridiculously easy to use, and it pretty much has fields for just about every goddamn thing you can think of-edition notes, whether or not it was signed, whether or not it’s a rare edition, the condition of the book, whether you bought it used, etc. Books without ISBNs, such as very old books or ARCs, can be entered manually-you can conduct a search by entering keywords such as the title and author and it’ll search through ’s database for hits, or you can create a blank book and enter everything by hand. If you get a false hit, you can search using the ISBN, which is by far the quickest and most accurate way to search. You need to change the angle of the book at first, and futz around with distance, but once you figure out how the software likes it, you can buzz along at a good clip. So, first things first: does the webcam barcode scanner work? Also, my obsession with owning first edition copies of Laura Kinsale novels in mint condition borders on the creepy, but we already know that my love for her books is like a truck, eh?)ĪNYWAY, back to the review of Delicious Library itself. I think I have everything she’s ever published except for her incredibly hard-to-find Regencies. 520 books, motherfuckers! (Realization: The extent of Anne Stuart’s backlist that I own is bordering on the ridiculous. ![]() I stayed up until 3:30 in the morning last night scanning in about half of my book collection. I don’t have a MacBook for myself, but I’m lucky enough that my good friend and roommate is willing to lend me her MacBook and share her copy of Delicious Library with me. Sound too good to be true? Well, it kind of is, a little, but by and large it totally works as advertised. You can buy a barcode scanner, too, and use that, but the thing is, you don’t have to. The feature that had me hopping with agonized ready-to-poop-my-pants excitement was the fact that it utilizes the webcam as a barcode scanner. If you don’t know what it is yet, it’s basically software for cataloguing your stuff-books, CDs, DVDs, games, whatever. You bibliophile tech-geeky Mac owners have probably heard of Delicious Library those of you with Windows machines are probably gnashing your teeth with envy. This totals to $40, which is what DL1 alone cost before May 27, so it's not really much of a change except you have to pay less up-front, which I figure nobody will complain about.ĭelicious Library 1 isn't currently linked from the main site (I'm not sure where to put it) but you can get it from. However, the free upgrade offer from DL1 to DL2 ends at midnight on (with the lowering of DL1's price), so if you later buy Leopard it'll cost $20 to go to DL2 as well. Note that DL2 only runs on Leopard, so I'm going to keep selling Delicious Library 1 as long as there is interest, but for $20 instead of $40. Or why not just download it from - I mean, it's free to try out, and DL2 makes a copy of your Delicious Library 1 collection so you can always go back. ![]() I could blah blah blah a lot about it, but basically the entire website has been re-written to sell DL2, so please explore it. I'm very proud of it, and very exhausted. There are over a hundred new features in 2, and hundreds more bug fixes. Delicious Library 1.0 only took seven months to write, so, obviously, this one was a lot harder. We've been working on Delicious Library 2 since November of 2004, with six months out to do internationalization of Delicious Library 1.5, and four or so months to rewrite iSight scanning for internal iSights in Delicious Library 1.6.
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