gLabels : Create labels, business cards & media covers in Linux Mint (Ubuntu)
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- Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024
- gLabels : Create labels, business cards & media covers in Linux Mint (Ubuntu):
gLabels is a program for creating labels and business cards for the GNOME desktop environment. It is designed to work with various laser/ink-jet peel-off label and business card sheets that you'll find at most office supply stores. gLabels is free software and is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License.
Terminal Command:
sudo apt-get install glabels
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Brilliant, thank you for sharing this information !! It's just what I needed.
Thank you.
Thanks for your tutorial. I want to make cd-labels using Pressit-stickers. Is it possible to export to a pdf-file so that a printingshop can print them?
Well done!
thanx very much very helpful friend
Great!! Thank you very much. :-)
somebody is using Dymo 450?, intalled drivers but still cant make it print.
great! thanks!
Is somebody using Brother label makers? Are they compatible with Linux Mint pls?
Did you ever find out?
thanks dude i almost lost a client
Reading barcodes with a USB webcam on Linux?
OK. Follow these steps…
First, installed Zbar and a little program called “crikey”. The easy way. Open a terminal and type in:
sudo apt-get install zbar-tools
sudo apt-get install libx11-dev x11proto-xext-dev libxt-dev libxtst-dev
wget www.shallowsky.com/software/crikey/crikey-0.8.3.tar.gz
tar -xzf crikey-0.8.3.tar.gz
cd crikey-0.8.3
make
sudo cp crikey /usr/local/bin
cd
clear
clear
Now hook up your USB webcam.
Is your USB webcam supported by V4L1 (Video4Linux1)? Then, open again a terminal and type in:
LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/libv4l/v4l1compat.so zbarcam -raw -prescale=320×240 /dev/video1 | crikey -i
Now open Google or a Gedit instance, clic inside the search box, and put a barcode in front of your USB webcam. Focus in the barcode, as necessary. You will get the barcode number where you have clicked on before…
Is your USB webcam supported by V4L2 (Video4Linux2)? Then, open a terminal and type in:
zbarcam -raw -prescale=320×240 /dev/video0 | crikey -i
If the above commands don’t work, try “video1”, instead of “video0”