Elo 1525L - Manuals
Elo 1525L – Manual in PDF format online.
Manuals:
Manual Elo 1525L
Summary
Chapter 1 Introduction 1 Precautions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Chapter 2 Installation and Setup 3 Unpacking Your Touchmonitor . . . . . . . . . . . 3Product Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Main Unit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4Rear View . . . . . . . . . . ....
1-1 C H A P T E R 1 C HAPTER 1 I NTRODUCTION Congratulations on your purchase of an Elo TouchSystems Entuitive touchmonitor. Your new touchmonitor combines the reliable performance of Elo’s touch technology with the latest advances in LCD display design. This combination of features creates a natura...
2-3 C H A P T E R 2 C HAPTER 2 I NSTALLATION AND S ETUP This chapter discusses how to install your LCD touchmonitor and how to install Elo TouchSystems driver software. Unpacking Your Touchmonitor Check that the following 8 items are present and in good condition: LCD Display User Guide-on CD,Quick ...
2-4 E l o E n t u i t i v e T o u c h m o n i t o r U s e r G u i d e Product Overview Main Unit Rear View LCD Display Stand
2-6 E l o E n t u i t i v e T o u c h m o n i t o r U s e r G u i d e Touch Interface Connection N OTE : Your interface cables may have been pre-connected to your monitor at the factory. Your touchmonitor comes with one of the following touchscreen connector cables: Serial (RS-232) cable or USB cabl...
2-7 STEP 1-Removing the Back Cover • The cables are routed through the back of the stand. • To remove the back cover, place one hand at the top of the stand and your other hand on the bottom cut-out. • Pull forward from the bottom cut-out and twist the cover until it snaps off. The cable ports are l...
2-8 E l o E n t u i t i v e T o u c h m o n i t o r U s e r G u i d e STEP 2-Connecting the Video Cable • Tilt the screen up and back to access the connection ports. • Connect the 15-pin video cable (the ferrite bead end) to the video port on your PC. • Connect the other end of the video cable to th...
2-9 STEP 3-Connecting the Serial Touchscreen Cable • Connect the female end of the serial (RS-232) cable to the serial port on the back of your PC. • Connect the male end of the cable to the serial touchscreen connector on your touchmonitor. • Secure the cable to your touchmonitor and PC by turning ...
2-10 E l o E n t u i t i v e T o u c h m o n i t o r U s e r G u i d e STEP 4-Connecting the Speaker Cable N OTE : If you do not wish to connect the speaker cable, go to step 5. • To use the built in speakers, you need to connect the speaker cable. Connect the speaker cable to the speaker port insid...
2-11 STEP 5-Connecting the Power Cable Depending on where you live, you will use either the European or US/Canadian power cable. • Connect the female end of the power cable to the power port on the touchmonitor. • Route the cable through the cable management clip. N OTE : To protect your equipment a...
2-12 E l o E n t u i t i v e T o u c h m o n i t o r U s e r G u i d e USB Connection N OTE : A USB connection can only be used if your PC is running Windows 98, 2000, Me or XP. The following illustrations guide you step by step in connecting your touchmonitor using a USB cable connection. CAUTION B...
2-15 STEP 3-Connecting the USB Touchscreen Cable • Connect the USB touchscreen cable to the USB touchscreen connector on the touchmonitor. • Connect the other end of the USB touchscreen cable to your PC. • The touchscreen cable connectors should fit snugly into the connectors on your touchmonitor an...
2-17 STEP 5-Connecting the Power Cable Depending on where you live, you will use either the European or US/Canadian power cable. • Connect the female end of the power cable into the power port on the touchmonitor. • Route the cable through the cable management clip. N OTE : To protect your equipment...
2-18 E l o E n t u i t i v e T o u c h m o n i t o r U s e r G u i d e Optimizing the LCD Display To ensure the LCD display works well with your computer, configure the display mode of your graphic card to make it less than or equal to 1024 x 768 resolution, and make sure the timing of the display m...
2-19 Accessing the VESA Mounting Interface If you want to convert your desktop monitor to a wall mount or kiosk monitor, follow the steps below to access the VESA mounting interface. N OTE : You will need a screwdriver for the following steps. 1 Remove the back cover of the stand by pulling forward ...
2-20 E l o E n t u i t i v e T o u c h m o n i t o r U s e r G u i d e Installing the Driver Software Elo TouchSystems provides driver software that allows your touchmonitor to work with your computer. Drivers are located on the enclosed CD-ROM for the following operating systems: • Windows XP • Win...
2-21 Installing the Serial Touch Driver for Windows XP, Windows 2000 1 , Me, 95/98 and NT 4.0 N OTE : For Windows 2000 and NT 4.0 you must have administrator access rights to install thedriver. 1 Insert the Elo CD-ROM in your computer’s CD-ROM drive. If the AutoStart feature for your CD-ROM drive is...
2-22 E l o E n t u i t i v e T o u c h m o n i t o r U s e r G u i d e Installing the Serial Touch Driver for MS-DOS and Windows 3.1 You must have a DOS mouse driver (MOUSE.COM) installed for your mouse if you wish to continue using your mouse along with your touchmonitor in DOS. To install Windows ...
2-23 Installing the USB Touch Driver Installing the USB Touch Driver for Windows XP, Windows 2000, Me and 98 1 Insert the Elo CD-ROM in your computer’s CD-ROM drive. If Windows 98 or Windows 2000 starts the Add New Hardware Wizard: 2 Choose Next. Select “Search for the best driver for your device (R...
3-25 C H A P T E R 3 C HAPTER 3 O PERATION About Touchmonitor Adjustments Your touchmonitor will unlikely require adjustment. Variations in video output and application may require adjustments to your touchmonitor to optimize the quality of the display. For best performance, your touchmonitor should...
3-26 E l o E n t u i t i v e T o u c h m o n i t o r U s e r G u i d e Side Bezel Buttons Control Function MENU Menu Display on exit the OSD menus. Contrast/Up/Toggle 1. Shortcut to Contrast adjustment2. Increase value of adjustment items3. With menu on toggles OSD options Volume/Down Toggle 1. Shor...
3-27 OSD Menu Function C O N T R A S T 5 0 Contrast Controls the picture contrast Phase Controls the vertical fine adjustment Brightness Controls the picture brightness Clock Controls the horizontal fine adjustment V-Position Controls the vertical position OSD H-Position Adjusts the horizontal posit...
4-29 C H A P T E R 4 C HAPTER 4 T ROUBLESHOOTING If you are experiencing trouble with your touchmonitor, refer to the following table. If the problem persists, please contact your local dealer or our service center. Solutions to Common Problems Problem Suggestion(s) No image appears on screen. Check...
A-31 A P P E N D I X A C HAPTER 4 N ATIVE R ESOLUTION The native resolution of a monitor is the resolution level at which the LCD panel is designed to perform best. For the Elo LCD touchmonitor, the native resolution is 1024 x 768 for the XGA-15 inch size. In almost all cases, screen images look bes...
B-33 A P P E N D I X B C HAPTER 4 T OUCHMONITOR S AFETY This manual contains information that is important for the proper setup and maintenance of your touchmonitor. Before setting up and powering on your new touchmonitor, read through this manual, especially Chapter 2 (Installation), and Chapter 3 ...
B-34 E l o E n t u i t i v e T o u c h m o n i t o r U s e r G u i d e Care and Handling of Your Touchmonitor The following tips will help keep your Elo Entuitive touchmonitor functioning at the optimal level. • To avoid risk of electric shock, do not disassemble the brick supply or display unit cab...
C-35 A P P E N D I X C C HAPTER 4 T ECHNICAL S PECIFICATIONS Compatible Video Modes Your Elo Entuitive touchmonitor is compatible with the following standard video modes: Mode Resolution H. Frequency (kHz) V. Frequency (Hz) IBM & VESA VGA 640 x 350 31.47 70.09 IBM & VESA VGA 640 x 400 31.47 ...
C-36 E l o E n t u i t i v e T o u c h m o n i t o r U s e r G u i d e Touchmonitor Specifications Table C.1 15" LCD Touchmonitor (ET15-XXWA-1) Specifications Display Type Active matrix, thin film transistor (TFT), liquid crystal display Size 15-inch diagonal 304.1 x 228.1 mm useful screen area ...
43 C HAPTER 4 R EGULATORY I NFORMATION I. Electrical Safety Information: A) Compliance is required with respect to the voltage, frequency, and currentrequirements indicated on the manufacturer’s label. Connection to a differentpower source than those specified herein will likely result in improper o...
47 C HAPTER 4 W ARRANTY Except as otherwise stated herein or in an order acknowledgment delivered to Buyer, Seller warrants to Buyer that the Product shall be free of defects in materials and workmanship. The warranty for the touchmonitors and components of the product is 1 year. Seller makes no war...
I n d e x - 4 9 Numerics 15" LCD Touchmonitor (ET15-XXWA-1) Dimensions, 4015” LCD Touchmonitor (ET15-XXWA-1) Specifications, 36 A About the Product, 1About Touchmonitor Adjustments, 25Accessing the VESA Mounting Interface, 19AccuTouch Touchmonitor Specifications, 39Agencies, 36Auto Adjust, 27 B ...
USB (UNIVERSAL SERIAL BUS) SWIPE READER TECHNICAL REFERENCE MANUAL Manual Part Number 99875191 Rev 4 AUGUST 2001 20725 South Annalee Avenue Carson, CA 90746 Phone: (310) 631-8602 FAX: (310) 631-3956 Technical Support: (888) 624-8350 www.magtek.com
52 Copyright 2001 MAG-TEK, Inc. Printed in the United States of America Information in this document is subject to change without notice. No part of this document may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, for any purpose, without the express written pe...
53 Limited Warranty Mag-Tek, Inc. (hereinafter “Mag-Tek”) warrants this Mag-Tek product IN ITS ENTIRETY, to be in good working order for a period of one year from the date of purchase from Mag-Tek. Should this product fail to be in good working order at any time during this warranty period, Mag-Tek ...
57 SECTION 1. FEATURES AND SPECIFICATIONS The USB (Universal Serial Bus) Swipe Reader is a compact magnetic stripe card reader which conforms to ISO standards. The Reader is compatible with the PC series of personal computers or any device with a USB interface. A card is read by sliding it, stripe d...
USB Swipe Reader 58 CONFIGURATIONS The Configurations are as follows: ACCESSORIES The accessories are as follows: Part Number Description 21042806 USB MSR Demo Program with Source Code (Diskette) 99510026 USB MSR Demo Program with Source Code (W EB) REFERENCE DOCUMENTS Axelson, Jan. USB Complete, Ev...
61 SECTION 2. INSTALLATION This section describes the cable connection, the Windows Plug and Play Setup, and the physical mounting of the unit. USB CONNECTION Connect the USB cable to a USB port on the host. The Reader, LED Indicator, and pin numbers for the 4-pin connector are shown in Figure 2-1. ...
USB Swipe Reader 62 WINDOWS PLUG AND PLAY SETUP On hosts with the Windows operating system, the first time the device is plugged into a specific USB port, Windows will pop up a dialog box, which will guide you through the process of installing a device driver for the device. After this process is co...
Section 2. Installation 63 Figure 2-2. Mounting Hole Dimensions For Surface 2. Ensure the Reader is positioned on a flat, accessible surface with at least 4 inches clearance on either end for room to swipe a card. Orient the Reader so the side with the LED is facing the direction of intended use. If...
65 SECTION 3. OPERATION This section describes the LED Indicator and Card Read. LED INDICATOR The LED indicator will be either off, red, or green. When the device is not powered, the LED will be off. When the device is first plugged in, the LED will be red. As soon as the device is plugged in, the h...
67 SECTION 4. USB COMMUNICATIONS This device conforms to the USB specification revision 1.1. This device also conforms with the Human Interface Device (HID) class specification version 1.1. The device communicates to the host as a vendor defined HID device. The details about how the card data and co...
USB Swipe Reader 68 following table. The usage types are also listed. These usage types are defined in the HID Usage Tables document. Magnetic Stripe Reader usage page 0xff00: Usage ID (Hex) Usage Name Usage Type Report Type 1 Decoding reader device Collection None 20 Track 1 decode status Data Inpu...
Section 4. USB Communications 69 Item Value(Hex) Usage (Card encode type) 09 38 Report Count (7) 95 07 Input (Data, Variable, Absolute, Bit Field) 81 02 Usage (Track 1 data) 09 30 Report Count (110) 95 6E Input (Data, Variable, Absolute, Buffered Bytes) 82 02 01 Usage (Track 2 data) 09 31 Report Cou...
Section 4. USB Communications 71 CARD ENCODE TYPE This one byte value indicates the type of encoding that was found on the card. The following table defines the possible values. Value Encode Type Description 0 ISO/ABA ISO/ABA encode format 1 AAMVA AAMVA encode format 2 CADL CADL encode format 3 Blan...
USB Swipe Reader 74 Property ID is a one byte field that contains a value that identifies the property. The following table lists all the current property ID values: Value Property ID Description 0 SOFTWARE_ID The device’s software identifier 1 SERIAL_NUM The device’s serial number 2 POLLING_INTERVA...
Section 4. USB Communications 75 SERIAL_NUM PROPERTY Property ID: 1 Property Type: String Length: 0 – 15 bytes Get Property: Yes Set Property: Yes Default Value: The default value is no string with a length of zero. Description: The value is an ASCII string that represents the device’s serial number...
77 SECTION 5. DEMO PROGRAM The demo program, which is written in Visual Basic, can be used to do the following: • Read cards from the device and view the card data • Send command requests to the device and view the command responses • Guide application developers in their application development by ...
USB Swipe Reader 78 SOURCE CODE Source code is included with the demo program. It can be used as a guide for application development. It is described in detail, with comments, to assist developers. The book USB Complete by Jan Axelson is also a good guide for application developers, especially the c...
MAGTEK DEVICE DRIVERS FOR WINDOWS PROGRAMMING REFERENCE MANUAL Manual Part Number: 99875125 Rev 6 NOVEMBER 2001 20725 South Annalee Avenue Carson, CA 90746 Phone: (310) 631-8602 FAX: (310) 631-3956 Technical Support: (888) 624-8350 www.MagTek.com
87 SECTION 1. OVERVIEW The MagTek Device (MTD) Drivers for Windows is a collection of individual drivers that support a number of MagTek products. These drivers provide a uniform application interface for controlling a wide range of MagTek devices. The drivers, combined with a device control languag...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 88 • MagTek devices are attached to the host in different ways . MagTek devices may be attached to a serial port, parallel port, to another device or even to the keyboard port. All these ports differ greatly in nature and would all have to be accessed by the applica...
Section 1. Overview 89 usually remain unchanged, even though the new device may be very different from the old one. The features of a driver that implement a device control language completely shield an application developer from the complexities of device-specific functionality. LANGUAGE OVERVIEW T...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 90 COMMANDS Like properties, commands are identified by a string name and have string arguments. All commands are terminated by line feed <LF> or a carriage return. To invoke a command, an application simply writes it to the driver in the same manner as writin...
Section 1. Overview 91 TYPICAL OPERATION This section describes a typical pattern that an application developer may use to operate a device. Although it is the most typical pattern, it is by no means the only viable one. Refer to Section 5, Example Applications, to see how to use the drivers in vari...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 92 instruct the device to return the card data when swiped. All the facilities of the driver are utilized during this stage of operation. Close the device When the application is finished with the device, it simply closes the port using the handle obtained when it o...
Section 1. Overview 93 Settings tab. This gives both the Friendly Name and the port name ( COM<5-15> ). It also identifies the physical port that will be used to communicate with the device. Open the device using either of the previous names. Use whatever facility is provided by your developme...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 94 ‘set up error handling On Error Resume Next ‘submit echo command Put #1, , "/echo Hello" + Chr$(10) ‘declare an input buffer a$ = String(2000, Chr$(0)) ‘read echo response from device Get #1, , a$If Err.Number <> 0 Then <<process error>>...
Section 1. Overview 95 1. It can prompt the user to repeat the action and re-submit the command. This is typical if the status does not indicate a failure, per se, but that the device may not be ready yet or first needs some other interaction by the user. 2. It can reset the device and prompt the us...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 96 Installation And Setup) and select Properties . Click on the Version tab. Note the File Version, Part Number, and Description . INSTALLATION The drivers are installed by means of the Windows “Add New Hardware” facility in Windows 95/98/ME and the "INF" in...
SECTION 2. PROPERTIES This section lists the properties that are used in the MagTek Drivers. Properties can be interrogated by issuing a get command and modified with a set command. Refer to Section 3. Commands for complete description and examples of all commands. The c_xxx properties are set by th...
101 SECTION 3. COMMANDS This section describes all of the commands that can be used with the MagTek Windows Device Drivers. Some commands require parameters to indicate to the driver exactly what function is to be performed. While there are a few device-specific commands, most commands can be used w...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 102 Examples: 000000000011111111112222222222012345678901234567890123456789/read -00082 /get trk_enable 110 NOTATION CONVENTIONS The following conventions are used in the tables that follow. Fixed Size (Bold) Used to represent literals (symbols, exactly as sent or re...
Section 3. Commands 103 display Function Show a single message or two alternating messages on the device’s display. Syntax /display [x] The optional argument x indicates the message to be displayed. Errors none Remarks If the optional argument x is provided, this command displays it as a single mess...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 104 event Function Response to an unsolicited event notification. Syntax none Errors none Remarks This response can occur when an unsolicited event, such as card inserted, occurs. The format of the response is: /event n data n is a numeric event code: 1 – medium has...
Section 3. Commands 105 load_key Function Load an encryption key into the device. Syntax /load_key n key n can be one of the following values: M – master key ( key is in clear text) S – session key ( key is encrypted under Master Key) 0 ... 3 – lower working keys ( key is encrypted under Session Key...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 106 rawrecv Function Receive data from the device. Syntax /rawrecv Errors /rawrecv 45 <LF> If a command is already pending. /rawrecv 82<LF> If the command was canceled by the user (e.g., with CLEAR key) Remarks This command overrides the default processi...
Section 3. Commands 107 rawsend Function Send arbitrary data to the device. Syntax /rawsend x x is an arbitrary string which is transmitted directly to the device. The string x is passed as-is to the device, except for ‘\’ which is used as an ‘escape’ character: • \r is converted to <CR> • \n ...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 108 read Function Read data from the device. Syntax /read [[x] y] The optional argument x specifies the data source; if x is missing, a card will be read. Refer to the Read Argument table below for a description data sources. The optional argument y is used to speci...
Section 3. Commands 109 Read Arguments The optional argument x used in the read command specifies the type of data to read and y specifies the text to be displayed. The following table describes the recognized x arguments for the read command: Read Argument Description any Read any type of data. Thi...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 112 reset Function Reset the device. Syntax /reset Errors none Remarks Clear any pending operations and reset the device to initial state (for mechanized card devices this command will also eject the card). This does not affect any of the properties. Example To retu...
Section 3. Commands 113 write Function Data encode command. Syntax /write data Errors /write 94 <LF> Encode is not supported on this device. /write 34 <LF> The data field was in the incorrect format. /write 82 <LF> The write command was canceled. /write 45 <LF> Device in wron...
115 SECTION 4. MAGNETIC CARD DATA PARSING This section describes the flexible data parsing language to be used by the MagTek device drivers to parse specific fields from magnetic card data and expose those fields as properties which may be retrieved by an application using the /get command. The data...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 116 • Property names specified in format rules are 11 characters or less, consisting of alphabetic characters, digits, and ‘_’. The property name begins with an alphabetic character. • Properties used in format strings do not conflict with properties defined by the ...
Section 4. Magnetic Card Data Parsing 117 If the driver is successful in applying one of the rules, the name of the applied format is available in the property applied_fmt. LANGUAGE FORMAT Format Name (fmtx_name) The format name specifies an identifier by which to identify the format template and/or...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 118 A format rule describes how the data is to be parsed. Characters that must be matched as literals are placed as is in the string or preceded with a ‘\’ if the character is one of the following: ‘[’, ‘]’, ‘(’, ‘)’, ‘*’, ‘_’, ‘<’, ‘>’, ‘:’, ‘.’, or ‘\’. Fiel...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 120 The property name can also contain a modifier at the end preceded by a ‘:’ which specifies the type of data to store in that property. For example <cust_name:A> specifies that customer name should contain alphabetic characters, spaces, and punctuation. The...
Section 4. Magnetic Card Data Parsing 121 DEFAULT FORMATS The MTD drivers will be assigned parameters with default formats for parsing magnetic stripe data. The formats will be placed in the INF file for the driver and written to the registry when the driver is installed. Some examples are shown bel...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 122 fmt5_name "AAMVA" fmt5_template"%<*>?;<*>?{(+|%|#|!)<*>?}" fmt5_rules "{%<State[2]><City>^<LastName>$<FirstName>$<MidName>^<Adr>^<*>? ;<*[6]><DLID>=<ExpDate[4]><...
125 SECTION 5. EXAMPLE APPLICATIONS While each application in this section is oriented toward a specific programming language, different devices are addressed in each example. It may be useful for the reader to look at all examples to understand how the MagTek Windows Drivers can operate with variou...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 130 ' Set the com port number retrieved from the response MSComm1.CommPort = PortNumber ' Open the com port and establish communications with the device MSComm1.PortOpen = True ' enable the read button btnRead.Enabled = True txtInfo.Text = "Click on the Read but...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 136 POWER BUILDER EXAMPLE The following example illustrates how to set up PowerBuilder (from Sybase) to read magnetic data from the IntelliPIN device. Since PowerBuilder does not interface to a serial port very easily, a third-party OCX is required. The first part o...
139 APPENDIX A. INSTALLATION AND SETUP The distribution disks contain the MTD Driver files for many of the MagTek products. In addition to the drivers, there are number of files that are required to support the installation and operation of these drivers. The disk contents are listed in the tables b...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 140 INSTALLING DEVICE DRIVERS (W95/98/ME) File or Directory Name Device Friendly Name DESCRIPTION OEMSETUP.INF Installation descriptor file README.TXT Describes the disk file contents and provides installation procedures \W95_DRV Directory The following Windows 95/9...
Appendix A. Installation and Setup 143 1. Either accept the default selection for the virtual Port Name or select the desired port (COM5-COM15) to be associated with the device from the Port Name combo box and modify the device’s friendly name if the default is not acceptable. 2. Select the port to ...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 146 MAGCDFLT.DLL MAGCxxx.HLP (locale specific) MAGCxxx.DLL (locale specific) 7. Find and remove the copy of the Mag-TekOEMSETUP.INF file made by Windows. In release 1 of Windows 95, it is located in C:\Windows\inf\ . With the OSR2 release of Windows 95 (Win95B) and ...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 148 Wizard. Open the Wizard by double clicking on the Add/Remove Programs icon in the Control Panel. On the Install/Uninstall tab. Find and select the entry that reads MTD preliminary release (uninstall) or Mag-Tek Device Drivers (MTD) - uninstall , then click on th...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 150 In Windows 2000/XP, only users with Administrator privileges may install system components. Log on as Administrator (or as a user with full administrative privileges) before attempting to install the MTD driver. It is important to uninstall the previous version ...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 152 12. Uncheck all “Optional search locations” check boxes. 13. Click the “ Next ” button to advance to the next input screen. 14. Click the “ Next ” button to advance to the next input screen. 15. Answer " Yes " to the "Confirm Driver Install". (No...
Appendix A. Installation and Setup 153 MTD was successfully re-started. The changes you made are now in effect. Note Only a single keyboard device can be installed at a time. Adding a Serial Device (WNT/2000/XP) Mini MICR is used in the following example: 1. Select an unused COM port number for the ...
Appendix A. Installation and Setup 155 Command syntax summary Command Syntax Meaning mtcfg list installed MagTek device drivers mtcfg -? display a help page mtcfg -help display a help page mtcfg -models list available MagTek device models mtcfg port-name list settings for a given device mtcfg port-n...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 156 model is the full name of the device model to be added. The name should be enclosed in quotes if it contains spaces. Use " mtcfg -models " to see a list of models. The model names used by MTCFG are the ones specified in the [Models] section of the MTD in...
Appendix A. Installation and Setup 157 Configuration Examples for Windows NT/2000/XP These examples are for illustration only. Most of the command line entries will have to be modified to accommodate the actual installation. Device or driver Command Line Comment Generic RS-232 MTCFG COM5 "Generi...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 158 Modifying a Device Driver's Settings (WNT/2000/XP) Use the following syntax to change settings of a device: mtcfg <port-name> <setting1> [<setting2> [<setting3>...]] each of the settings is specified as name = value if value contains spac...
Appendix A. Installation and Setup 159 Removing a Device (WNT/2000/XP) To remove a MagTek device use the following command syntax: mtcfg port-name -delete The device is removed and all non-default settings specified for it are lost. This operation does not remove any files from the system. To remove...
161 APPENDIX B. COMMAND LIST SUMMARY This is a consolidated list of all available commands for the MagTek Windows Drivers. Command Description Page /cancel cmd Cancel a command. cmd can be any of the transaction commands. 16 /display [x] Display a message or two alternating messages on the LCD scree...
163 APPENDIX C. STATUS CODES The following table defines the status codes returned in command responses. Note that it is not meant as a complete list of status codes–new codes may be added as necessary. Value Mnemonic and Description 00 successful operation 05 port already open 1F wrong device ID 22...
165 APPENDIX D. DEVICE DRIVER SUMMARIES This section contains summaries of Device Drivers for the for the following models: • IntelliPIN and IntelliPIN PLUS • MagWedge Reader • MiniWedge Reader • MICR+ Reader • Mini-MICR Reader • Port Powered RS-232 Swipe Reader • Port Powered RS-232 Insertion Reade...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 166 INTELLIPIN PINPAD & MSR File Name IPIN.VXD Part Number 30037395 Friendly Name(s) IntelliPIN RS-232, IntelliPIN Wedge & IntelliPIN MICR+ Aux Remarks The Automatic Settings in the properties sheet are not supported; the communications must be specified man...
Appendix D. Device Driver Summaries 167 MAGWEDGE SWIPE READER File Name MAGWEDGE.VXD Part Number 30037348 Friendly Name(s) MagWedge Remarks The driver cannot determine which tracks are supported on the device, so the c_tracks and trk_enable properties will always indicate 111 . Commands Supported /c...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 168 MINIWEDGE MSR File Name MINIWEDG.VXD Part Number 30037340 Friendly Name(s) MiniWedge Remarks When operating in the Windows Driver mode, the MiniWedge transmits data as ASCII characters instead of scan codes in order to reduce the transmission time. (A full 3-tra...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 172 PORT-POWERED RS-232 INSERTION READER File Name MTPPINSR.VXD Part Number 30037339 Friendly Name(s) Port-powered insert reader Remarks If events_on is enabled, the driver will send /event 1 M when the card is inserted. It is suggested that events be disabled ( /se...
175 INDEX A Access to the device ............................... . .. 92 account_no ................................................ 97 Action properties ....................................... 89 Adding a Keyboard Device (WNT) .......... 152 Adding a Serial Device (WNT)................. 153 Adding ...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 176 Device control language ............................ 88 Device Driver Summaries ......................... 165 Device, close the ........................................ 92 Device, interacting with ............................ 93 Device, methods of accessing .......
177 MTCFG Utility (WNT), Using ................. 154 MTD (Mag-Tek Drivers) ............................ 87 N Non-interactive commands ......................... 90 Notation Conventions................................ 102 O offline_enc................................................. 100 Open a device...
MagTek Device Drivers for Windows 178 Use Port ............................................... 153 , 158 Use the device ............................................. 91 V Ver Command ........................................... 112 Version, Driver ............................................ 95 Viewi...
Elo Manuals
-
Elo SW602113
Manual
-
Elo ET 1725C Series
Manual
-
Elo E355477
Manual
-
Elo SW 601075
Manual
-
Elo ET1915L
Manual
-
Elo 282P101210000
Manual
-
Elo MonitorMouse FOR WINDOWS NT Version 2.0
Manual
-
Elo E-Series
Manual
-
Elo 1519L
Manual
-
Elo 2639L
Manual
-
Elo 2824
Manual
-
Elo Tyco
Manual
-
Elo 1939L
Manual
-
Elo ET1X45C-4UWE-1
Manual
-
Elo 2401LM
Manual
-
Elo LCD
Manual
-
Elo E791522
Manual
-
Elo ET1525C
Manual
-
Elo ET4201L
Manual
-
Elo 2243L
Manual