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Dane-Elec Z-PEN Wireless USB Digital Pen, DA-DP1-01GC5-R
 
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Dane-Elec Z-PEN Wireless USB Digital Pen, DA-DP1-01GC5-R

by Dane-Elec
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)

In Stock.
Ships from and sold by Buy.com.
26 new from $65.11 1 used from $60.00

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this item with I-Pen Digital Pen Writer Ipen Optical USB Mouse Input Device $39.99

Dane-Elec Z-PEN Wireless USB Digital Pen, DA-DP1-01GC5-R + I-Pen Digital Pen Writer Ipen Optical USB Mouse Input Device
Price For Both: $106.98

These items are shipped from and sold by different sellers. Show details


What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?


Technical Details

  • Write, sketch or draw on any paper
  • Store your notes on the receiver - 1GB Flash memory on board
  • Convert handwritten notes to digital text on any kind of paper
  See more technical details

Product Details

  • Product Dimensions: 10 x 7.1 x 2 inches ; 0.6 ounces
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Shipping: This item is also available for shipping to select countries outside the U.S.
  • ASIN: B0013JHJWE
  • Item model number: DA-DP1-01GC5-R
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank
    #1 in  Electronics > Office Electronics > Presentation Products > Electronic White Boards
  • Date first available at Amazon.com: October 2, 2001

Product Description

Manufacturer Product Description

Overview
The zPen Digital Pen is a revolutionary new natural input device that captures your handwriting without the need for special paper or a direct connection to a computer. Write notes anywhere and then upload the files to your computer any time. It's the perfect merger of our most natural form of creative expression, pen on paper, with the modern need to digitize everything. Write, draw, sketch, compose or diagram anywhere and anytime without carrying a laptop. Later, with USB plug-and-play ease, upload your work to your computer where you can save it, edit it, search it and send it


Easy, Fast and Convenient to Use
Who is the zPen for?
The zPen is ideal for professionals, middle managers and students. Middle managers sit in a lot of meetings. They end up with hundreds of pages of notes in the classic yellow tablets. Buried in those tablets are to-do items, schedules, diagrams, agreements; lots of important stuff. But it gets lost there. Now there is a way to save, edit, search, and send these vital notes without spending hours typing.


The zPen effectively replaces the laptop computer and its disruption in meetings. Some companies have begun prohibiting laptops in meetings because the user becomes a passive recorder and is no longer an active participant. The interface with the zPen, however is completely intuitive, so all your creative faculties remain in play. It actually liberates the creative juices.


This is especially true in the classroom. Professors are complaining about looking out at a sea of screens and wondering if anyone is listening, much less participating. The zPen captures those notes, formulas and diagrams intuitively and without distraction.

How to Use the zPen
The zPen is remarkably easy to use. Pull out your familiar pad of paper and your zPen receiver. Clip it to your pad and turn it on. Start to write with your zPen. That’s it. The Pen automatically turns itself on and off. It may be the most unobtrusive technology available. You’re at your creative best with all your attention on the task at hand. It will run all day and store thousands of pages.


Parts and Accessories

Whenever you return from your meeting or class, simply insert the receiver into your USB port. The Viewer software automatically opens from the receiver and you click on the newest file to see your work. The accuracy and thoroughness of the zPen will delight you. Giggles are a common reaction to seeing all your creative glory on the computer screen for the first time. From there, you have numerous options.

Software
With one button click you can convert your notes to a Adobe pdf file and distribute the file to team members or classmates who slept in. This Viewer software runs on virtually all recent operating systems, from Windows 2000 onward, Mac OS and even most versions of Linux. If you want to convert your handwriting into Word-compatible text, a full version of MyScriptNotes Optical Character Recognition Software is included. (Windows only) Or, just drop the original file into a folder as is and use our exciting new NoteSearch software (Windows only) to search and sort on all your HANDWRITTEN notes. Type in a key word, like amazon.com and it brings up all the documents where you wrote about amazon.com. You get the best of both worlds; the intuitive freedom of the pen plus the digital power to save, sort and search. We think this will change how people work and learn. In addition to the pen, you get the rechargeable receiver and USB drive with one GB of flash memory; a USB cable, Pen and Ink Viewer for Windows, Mac or Linux; the full-version of MyScriptNotes for Windows and a 30-day trial of NoteSearch for Windows.

What's in the Box
zPen, 2 V393 batteries, 1Gb Zpen Receiver with built in rechargeable battery and onboard software

Product Description

Dane-Elec Z-PEN Wireless USB Digital Pen, DA-DP1-01GC5-R

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Customer Reviews

Average Customer Rating
3.3 out of 5 stars (24 customer reviews)
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (6)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
87 of 89 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Dane Electric Digital Pen, April 1, 2008
This review is from: Dane-Elec Z-PEN Wireless USB Digital Pen, DA-DP1-01GC5-R (Electronics)
I have been anticipating this product for about a year, so I was probably set up for the mild disappointment I experienced when it arrived. The early user review I read was almost certainly a plant since it pretty much was a rewording of the promotional materials preceding the product's release. For sure, the pen is pretty "cool" and quite a conversation piece, but there are a few drawbacks that are evident to me.

First, you have to hunt around for the electronic documentation since there are no printed instructions at all. That's not impossible, but somewhat annoying, especially when the documentation you do find is not all that clear. With a little time it can all be figured out, but it's certainly not plug and play out of the box. That brings us to the second issue, actually using it.

Very often the "recorder" doesn't start when the pen starts to move, so the resulting image (words or hand drawn graphics) has a lot of blank or missing parts. Slowing down a great deal helps a little, but still there are quite a few gaps. And slowing down to check the little light while taking notes during a presentation defeats the purpose of the thing anyway.

Finally, the resulting proprietary file which can only be exported through the cumbersome pdf format rather than the easily and widely used jpg format is very inconvenient. And the character recognition is actually sort of humorous in its inaccuracies. I suppose if I took the time to carefully print each number and letter the accuracy would improve, but again, that's not notetaking as it is usually performed.

I guess it's amazing that the thing works at all, but it's still just a little disappointing. I'll hang on to it because it's fun to have and show people, but it's probably easier just to scan the notes.

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48 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Sortta cool, but Finicky, August 23, 2008
By Graham I. Cummins (Bozeman, MT USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Dane-Elec Z-PEN Wireless USB Digital Pen, DA-DP1-01GC5-R (Electronics)
Practically speaking, this is a one or two star product. I gave them 3 stars because it is a product in a quite new market with a reasonable price. If you think it's a cool toy, buy it. If you need it to do serious work next week, don't buy it.

Here's the quick summary:

BOTTOM LINE:
The product is basically good, but the tendency of the receiver to drop information is a fatal flaw to practical use. The conditions under which information gets lost are detailed below.

PRO:
Good feature set. Good price point. Comes with lots of nice software stored conveniently on the receiver/flash drive. Writes on any paper. Uses common ink cartridges (and batteries, sort of - see below). MyScript notes software does surprisingly well at handwriting-to-text conversion.

CON:
Receiver is finicky; it can drop entire recording sessions, or parts of a page, even though the activity LED is flashing correctly. Top 20% of page is usually not recorded at all. Page turning is cumbersome. Careful placement of the receiver is important. Pen component is cheaply made. No off switch (so you need to remove batteries to save power). Resolution can be poor, especially near the bottom of a page. Limited number of output formats, and saved PDFs are not efficient (they are bigger than equivalent SVG files containing the pen lines).

In more detail:

I was pleased that the pen and software were easy to set up and use. I was also pleased that the pen viewer supports Linux and Mac, that MyScript Notes software was easy to register, and that MyScript works nicely, and sufficiently quickly, in VMWare Fusion Windows running on my first gen MacBook Pro. I was also pleased that the pen does what it says it does: it digitized my first few handwriting samples. Yay!

I was not pleased with the pen itself. I am sort of a pen snob, and usually write with a Namiki fountain pen. This pen feels like cheap plastic junk, and writes like the free ballpoints you get at conventions. To be fair, my Namiki and the zPen have about the same price, and the Namiki doesn't do any digital tricks (but oh man does it ever write nice!). One nice thing about the pen is that it takes common refills of the sort used by most multifunction pens, and some of these are pretty nice for ball points. Pilot PhD Multi refills and Fischer pressurized "universal" refills both fit, and write better than the included refill.

As a previous reviewer mentioned, there is no off switch on the pen, and so once you take out the little plastic isolator, it may drain your watch batteries in a hurry. This is annoying, but not fatal, since you can pull one of the batteries out and store it in the receiver cap to save power. Also, although I was not able to find the included GP393 batteries in my local store, I found that size 13 "zinc/air" hearing aid batteries fit, and work, just fine. I got an 8-pack of these at my local CVS pharmacy for $6. I live Bozeman MT (USA), which is certainly no shopping paradise, so when I can find what I need at the drug store across the street, I call that "easy to find". The receiver has an onboard rechargeable battery that charges via USB. Annoyingly, it will only charge when connected to a computer, so you can't use an AC->USB adapter (for example the Palm, Griffin, or Apple models) to charge it.

I tested the pen in a number of configurations. I quickly found out that there is a very large "dead zone" near the receiver. The manual says that within 1 inch of the receiver signal quality may be poor. I beg to differ. Within 4 inches of the receiver, signal quality may be entirely absent. I tried drawing a grid of lines on many types of paper, and almost every time the digitized result had a 3"-4" hemi-circle of missing lines centered on the receiver. I got my best results using an A5 notebook, and rather than clipping the receiver to the book, I just set it about 3 inches above the top of the page, at the same horizontal level (stacking it on top of my iPod touch worked well :). When writing this way, though, be careful not to move the notebook!

I did my best to have very careful handwriting, but I shouldn't have tried so hard. The resolution of the digitizer is not that great, and it gets worse farther from the receiver. By the bottom line of my notebook, my digital text looks like it was written by a guy with Parkinson's disease, even though the ink text looks fine. In the end I decided that, on an 8.5x11 college ruled pad (with the receiver set at the top of the pad), I could start writing 3.5" from the top, stop writing 2" from the bottom, and the intervening text digitized OK. Be careful that the receiver is oriented in exactly the same horizontal plane as your paper, or it won't work.

Well, except when it didn't record at all. I have had half a dozen experiences where I turn the receiver on, it flashes, then becomes steady as normal, I write, and the "pen down" LED turns on and off as normal, and then when I plug the receiver into the computer, there is a blank note file, and all my writing is lost.

Changing pages requires compressing the spring clip on the receiver. This seems to work OK, but you have to remember to do it, even though you can't have actually clipped the receiver to your paper if you expect the digitizer to work.

Be careful of your hand posture. If you grip too low, curl your hand around, or put your weak hand above the pen, it will block the digitizer.

Basically, all these constraints make the process of hand-writing a lot less pretty, and I feel like I should just type. There is, however, one redeeming merit: MyScript Notes. I hate Windows-only software on principal, and I don't tend to like non-open-source ware either. Despite this, I think MyScript is a fine program. It isn't perfect, especially if you have small writing, sloppy writing, writing with an unusual stroke sequence, or too little separation between words. However, if you write carefully, it can be 95% accurate in converting cursive script to digital text. That's a hard problem, and having usable accuracy at it is a major achievement. Kudos to MyScript.

Note that MyScript does care about the order of pen strokes. I can get a nice SVG file by tracing (e.g. with Illustrator or InkScape) a scan of a page, but this can't be recognized. For one thing, the SVG format MyScript understands is the Anoto format, and tracing with InkScape doesn't generate compliant SVG, but even if you convert it, without the correct stroke order, recognition doesn't work.

Anyway, I've now written a few dozen pages of fiction with the zPen, and put them in my computer. I can definitely go faster by writing normal ink with my Namiki and transcribing later with my keyboard, but it was a cool experience to see my writing turn into ascii automatically, hence the 3 stars.

I haven't tested an Anoto technology pen (eg the LiveScribe Pulse), but I bet they are much more reliable and accurate. If you really need the thing to work on demand, I'd try that solution, and just live with buying special paper. Alternately, go old school and use real live ink. If you do that, I suggest unlined Moleskin softcover notebooks and a Namiki Vanishing Point fountain pen running J Herbin ink. There's nothing in the digital wold that compares. Oh, and when you transcribe, use a dvorak layout keyboard :)
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Updated Review: 5 stars, October 6, 2008
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Dane-Elec Z-PEN Wireless USB Digital Pen, DA-DP1-01GC5-R (Electronics)
Updated Review: (I tried to update from 4 to 5 stars but it won't let me)

I left a review a few months ago saying, among other things, that I had trouble changing the ink cartridge. Since then some people have emailed me asking if I figured it out, so I think its time to give an update. I did manage to change the ink cartridge-- it was stuck at first, but if you pull on the tip of the ink cartridge with tweezers it should come out. After I got it out the first time it was easier to do with fingernails, but you have to get a good grip on it.

I have been using the Zpen for the past several weeks to take notes in class, and it works very well. I see some people saying its finicky but I haven't noticed that very much. As long as I stay in the main area of the paper (not above the clip thing, for instance) it works great. I had a few times when I went too far out to the edge of the paper or to the side of the clip part, and it didn't sense my handwriting very accurately but I have learned to stay within the lined part of a piece of A4 paper (normal notebook paper for americans) and it works very well. I bought a bunch of ink cartridge and battery refills so that if one runs out during class I can replace it right away. I do have to remember to charge it every night because I am using it for 3-4 hours of notetaking each day. I'm not sure exactly how long it lasts, I'd say maybe somewhere between 4-6 hours of solid notetaking it runs out of batteries.

The pen is very useful to me, because I am a mathematics grad student, and it is essentially impossible to type equations quickly enough to take notes on a computer in a math class. Because of that, everyone still uses paper and pen (or tablet PCs, but those are very expensive). I use my Zpen to take notes in all of my math classes and have a digital copy later, and I really like it. It works surprisingly well-- when I bought it I was suspicious that the ultrasound and infared technology would actually work, but it does very well. Also, its nice that I do have a physical copy of my notes as well, so if anything goes wrong I can scan them later. I've heard of some people having their tablet PC crash during class and losing all their notes.

Another good thing about this pen vs other digital pens is that it is compatible with a Mac (the handwriting recognition software is not, but the part that gives you the images of what you wrote is). As of summer 2008 when I bought this one, the Zpen was the only digital pen I could find that would work with a Mac.

I don't have much to say about the handwriting recognition software, because I haven't been using it. I tested it once on a PC and it works fine on normal writing but it can't make anything of my math notes, and I wouldn't expect it to. The equations turn into gibberish. It would be awesome if someone invented software that could read my math notes and turn them into nicely typed up equations, but I'm not holding my breath.

I also really like that the peninkviewer software is on the clip thing so you can use it on any mac without preinstalling anything.


--Original Review:

This product works perfectly as advertised. I bought it for taking notes in my graduate math courses which are about to start, so so far I have only tested it a few times, but it seems to work great. I like how the software is on the device itself so you don't have to worry about which computer to use.

I do have one question though. I have not been able to figure out how to change the ink cartridge. The directions are useless-- they literally have a drawing of the end of the pen with fingers next to it. I'm afraid to force it becuase I don't want to break the pen or ruin the pressure sensitivity. If anyone has successfully changed the ink cartridge I would really appreciate it if you could send me some details at kindersurprises@Gmail.com. Thanks!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars Not good at all
I ordered this for my husband. It didn't work at all - meaning, it would even turn on. We bought new batteries, thinking that might be the problem. Read more
Published 23 days ago by tsk's valentine

4.0 out of 5 stars Initially troublesome, but ultimately functional
Customer Video Review

Length:: 5:58 Mins

Published 1 month ago by Ana Mardoll

1.0 out of 5 stars Avoid This Product
Avoid the Dane-Elec wireless Z-Pen

Reciever unit would not charge out of the package. Factory battery was bad. Apparently not tested at the factory. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Auger6

1.0 out of 5 stars Save your money
I picked 2 of these up one as a gift for my stepdaughter and one for me to try I spent 3 days tring to get the thing charged, I called customer service of the company I bought... Read more
Published 2 months ago by crazykai

5.0 out of 5 stars digitizer for sketching -- awesome, tiny, cheap, and it works great
Ever wanted a simple way to digitize your sketches? Something totally portable, simple, cheap, and wireless? Try the zpen! Read more
Published 4 months ago by P. Millslagle

5.0 out of 5 stars Very good product
Works better than expected. It would help to have a file conversion program so that other software packages could import pen files. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Denise M. Law

5.0 out of 5 stars Nice Pen
Does what other pens do at a cheaper price. Bought for son. He has had no problems with it. Opened up 3 months ago battery still working. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Crazy Lady

5.0 out of 5 stars Great Product!!!!
Bought this for my wife and she LOVES it. She uses it to take notes at church and then downloads them for safe storing. Read more
Published 7 months ago by S. Howard

4.0 out of 5 stars It's a good product
It's a good product it does what it promise, the downside is that you have to write very clear at the bottom of the page (it's the place where sometimes the receiver can't read... Read more
Published 13 months ago by J. L. Jalife

1.0 out of 5 stars 4th time not lucky
I have had to send the pen back 3 times as it worked for a while and then gave up. Apparently there are problems with the pen batteries shorting out. Read more
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