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== History ==
== History ==
The design of TWAIN began in January 1991. The TWAIN group originally launched in 1992 by several members of the imaging industry, with the intention of standardizing communication between image handling software and hardware.<ref>[http://www.twain.org/abouttwain.shtm What is the TWAIN Initiative?]{{404|date=April 2015}}{{wayback|date=20120308025220|url=http://www.twain.org/abouttwain.shtm}}</ref> Review of the original TWAIN Developer’s Toolkit occurred from April, 1991 through January, 1992.<ref>[http://www.twain.org/docs/?M=A TWAIN docs index]{{404|date=April 2015}}{{wayback|date=20110927212506|url=http://www.twain.org/docs/?M=A}}</ref>
The design of TWAIN began in January 1991. The TWAIN group originally launched in 1992 by several members of the imaging industry, with the intention of standardizing communication between image handling software and hardware.<ref>[http://www.twain.org/abouttwain.shtm What is the TWAIN Initiative?] {{wayback|date=20120308025220 |url=http://www.twain.org/abouttwain.shtm }}</ref> Review of the original TWAIN Developer’s Toolkit occurred from April, 1991 through January, 1992.<ref>[http://www.twain.org/docs/?M=A TWAIN docs index] {{wayback|date=20110927212506 |url=http://www.twain.org/docs/?M=A }}</ref>


The word ''TWAIN'' is not officially an [[acronym]], but it is a [[backronym]]. The official website notes that "the word TWAIN is from [[Rudyard Kipling|Kipling]]'s ''[[The Ballad of East and West]]'' — '...and never the twain shall meet...' — reflecting the difficulty, at the time, of connecting scanners and [[personal computer]]s. It was up-cased to TWAIN to make it more distinctive. This led people to believe it was an acronym, and then to a contest to come up with an expansion. None was selected, but the entry ''Technology Without an Interesting Name'' continues to haunt the standard."<ref name=faqwhat>{{cite web|url=http://www.twainforum.org/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=10113&sid=7f0b04f65e5cc370659770f3c55e173c |title=The TWAIN Forum • View topic - What is TWAIN an acronym for? |publisher=Twainforum.org |date= |accessdate=2013-06-14}}</ref>
The word ''TWAIN'' is not officially an [[acronym]], but it is a [[backronym]]. The official website notes that "the word TWAIN is from [[Rudyard Kipling|Kipling]]'s ''[[The Ballad of East and West]]'' — '...and never the twain shall meet...' — reflecting the difficulty, at the time, of connecting scanners and [[personal computer]]s. It was up-cased to TWAIN to make it more distinctive. This led people to believe it was an acronym, and then to a contest to come up with an expansion. None was selected, but the entry ''Technology Without an Interesting Name'' continues to haunt the standard."<ref name=faqwhat>{{cite web|url=http://www.twainforum.org/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=10113&sid=7f0b04f65e5cc370659770f3c55e173c |title=The TWAIN Forum • View topic - What is TWAIN an acronym for? |publisher=Twainforum.org |date= |accessdate=2013-06-14}}</ref>

Revision as of 04:26, 11 April 2016

TWAIN
Original author(s)TWAIN Working Group
Developer(s)TWAIN Working Group
Initial releaseFebruary 1992; 33 years ago (1992-02)
Stable release
2.3 / 21 November 2013; 11 years ago (2013-11-21)
Operating systemLinux, OS X, Microsoft Windows
Platformx86, x86-64, PowerPC
Standard(s)TWAIN
TypeApplication programming interface
LicenseLGPL (Data Source Manager only)
Websitewww.twain.org

TWAIN is an applications programming interface (API) and communications protocol that regulates communication between software and digital imaging devices, such as image scanners and digital cameras.

TWAIN is not a hardware-level protocol; it requires a driver called Data Source for each device.[1]


History

The design of TWAIN began in January 1991. The TWAIN group originally launched in 1992 by several members of the imaging industry, with the intention of standardizing communication between image handling software and hardware.[2] Review of the original TWAIN Developer’s Toolkit occurred from April, 1991 through January, 1992.[3]

The word TWAIN is not officially an acronym, but it is a backronym. The official website notes that "the word TWAIN is from Kipling's The Ballad of East and West — '...and never the twain shall meet...' — reflecting the difficulty, at the time, of connecting scanners and personal computers. It was up-cased to TWAIN to make it more distinctive. This led people to believe it was an acronym, and then to a contest to come up with an expansion. None was selected, but the entry Technology Without an Interesting Name continues to haunt the standard."[4]

Release history of the TWAIN API
Version Release date Changes
1.0 February 1992
  • Initial release
1.5 May 1993
  • Performance enhancements
1.6 5 February 1996
  • Page-length detection
  • Buffer transfer
1.7 19 August 1997
  • Production scanning features
1.8 22 October 1998
  • Production scanning features omitted from v1.7 of the TWAIN specification
1.9 20 January 2000
2.0 22 February 2008
2.1 8 July 2009
  • Support for Windows 7 (32- and 64-bit)
  • Support for automatic color detection
2.2 16 February 2012
  • Implemented self-certification and new mandatory features
2.3 21 November 2013
  • Improved clarity and removed ambiguity.

Objectives

Objectives of the TWAIN Working Group and standard include:

  • Ensure image-handling software and hardware compatibility
  • Keep the specification current with the state of current software and hardware while maintaining backward compatibility
  • Provide multiple-platform support
  • Maintain and distribute a no-charge developer's toolkit
  • Ensure ease of implementation
  • Encourage widespread adoption
  • Open Source Data Source Manager
  • LGPL Open Source License
  • BSD Open Source Sample Application and Sample Data Source Application

Supported technologies

TWAIN provides support for:

TWAIN Working Group membership

Today the TWAIN standard, including the specification, data source manager and sample code, are maintained by the not-for-profit organization TWAIN Working Group.

Board and associate members of the TWAIN Working Group include:

See also

References

  1. ^ "TWAIN". Eztwain.com. Retrieved 2013-06-14.
  2. ^ What is the TWAIN Initiative? Archived 2012-03-08 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ TWAIN docs index Archived 2011-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "The TWAIN Forum • View topic - What is TWAIN an acronym for?". Twainforum.org. Retrieved 2013-06-14.

This article is based on material taken from the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing prior to 1 November 2008 and incorporated under the "relicensing" terms of the GFDL, version 1.3 or later.