BobBretall wrote:
I've also been using ComicBase for years and the scanner comes in handy for new books with barcodes (well, actually, my sainted wife does all the data entry for me).
Some day you'll have to tell me how you pulled that off.
BobBretall wrote:
It's definitely not the cheapest solution, but for my 60,000 book collection, I think it's the best. We have custom fields set up to track some things I care about that are not in the general release and like that it's on my computer and not a web-hosted Db.
I use some of the extra check boxes to mark issues of a particular type and I also use the ability to create variant issues to track books that I've had signed
BobBretall wrote:
(I'd be terrified on a web-hosted solution that the company would go out of business or something and then I'd be hosed. PLUS, I can access my info any time I boot up the laptop I host it on.
Also, since I have so many books in ComicBase, I'm kind of locked in. If other solutions want to prey on current ComicBase customers and get them to switch, they need to be able to import a ComicBase database.
Yes, any provider who could create a more modern solution that had a web component, could take Comicbase exports or create them, and provide exportable, standards based backups would be awesome. Esp if it came with smartphone apps and integrated with something like Red Laser.
The software guy in me is constantly nagged by the fact that Comicbase runs on Access and Access Forms. I wish they would at least modernize it some. It could really stand to be re-architected rather than just bolting on some simple new features every year.
I do like that it integrates with their sales site, but miss the old integration to e-bay.