>>>>> On Tue, 20 Nov 2001 22:34:50 +0100, Henning Meier-Geinitz >>>>> <henn...@meier-geinitz.de> said:
Henning> Hi, I just found out that it's about 5 years now that SANE Henning> came into existance. Quite a long time at least concerning Henning> software in my opinion. My oh my, how time flies! Henning> Time to celebrate a birthday party? Sounds great to me! ;-) Henning> The first mail on sane-devel is from 1996-12-09. Henning> Maybe someone (David?) can provide more data: Is there an Henning> older sane package than 0.1? No, I don't think so. Before SANE, there was a mscan-0.[012], which was a Mustek specific scanner program. Then I thought it was silly to have each and every scanner model supported by a separate program, duplicating all the user interface code over and over again. At some point, Andy Beck and I got together and started fleshing out. Henning> Is there a standard 0.1? I'm quite sure there must have been one, but it's probably gone forever. Actually, I'm not sure anymore whether it was Andy or me who started sane.tex. One thing I remember quite vividly is that I wrote the section describing the SANE network protocol on a plane ride to my next job interview. I was in the middle of finishing my dissertation, interviewing with various companies, so squeezing this in was quite crazy, but it was also fun, in a way. ;-) Henning> When was the idea of SANE born? Don't know about Andy, but I remember contemplating it early on while working on mscan. I just thought it was crazy that I'd have to write my own user interface when there are so many other good scanner programs out there already and all I really wanted was just to have my scanner supported. Given that mscan-0.0 was out around Sep 1996, that's probably close to the birth of the ideas behind SANE. We looked at various existing interfaces (including TWAIN, the linux hand scanner interface, etc.) and didn't really like what we were seeing, so we though perhaps it's time to start something new. Henning> Some statistics: :-) Very impressive stats! I have to say I'm very happy to see how the SANE community has grown. I think you and Oliver in particular are doing a great job at keeping things moving forward. This is how Open Source is meant to work. Kudos to all of you! --david