Great that you are making progress on this, thank you. Unfortunately, the device is not detected by your app. The system sees the POP on the USB bus and recognises as a camera. I am using a MacBook Pro 2020 M1.
Same. “No device was found, please plug in”. Shouldn’t the Handyscan software be asking for “security&privacy” access to the camera? I am on OS 11.4, on a Macbook Pro (16", 2019).
You need to create first a POP WiFi hotspot where the scanner can connect to. RevoPoint Team has provided steps to do so from an iPhone, but it is also possible to create the HotSpot directly from your Mac if you cannot from you iPhone (because your iPhone/iPad data plan may not have the HotSpot option, or because it is not convenient or too insecure). You can find the original instructions how to create a WiFi HotSpot on your Mac from this link: Creating a Wi-Fi Access Point on OS X – Laszlo Pusztai. Or you can check the summary I provided on the forum in the “[New Release] The Beta Mac Version of Handy Scan - 20210604” topic: [New Release] The Beta Mac Version of Handy Scan - 20210604 - #16 by Will
I just used another (already retired) regular access point with the Wifi POP / 12345678 that doesn’t span it’s own subnet. Then the scanner is visible to all devices in the whole network without the need to fiddle with hotspots.
I could use a little more info on how this is done. It reads as if you are using an old wi-fi router/repeater that has been configured with the name “POP” and the password “12345678”, but how does the phone get the info from the POP if the POP connects to the repeater instead of the phone?
I tried researching this, but all I am finding are ads and simple articles about connecting an extender onto an existing Hotspot.
I have one but will not use it until I receive my IOS lightning cable and will not recommend it to anyone else until I receive my IOS lightning cable as advertised and promised in your kickstarter campaign.