

Even with the dock and power block, the weight is still only 1.8 pounds. Not needing a computer means you can carry just the scanner, which weighs about 12 ounces. You can move the files to your computer later either with the supplied microSD adaptor, which plugs into an SD card slot, or by leaving the card in the scanner, connecting to your computer with the supplied USB cable, and then copying the files. Instead, it scans to a microSD card, and it comes with a 2-GB card to scan to. Like other Pandigital portable scanners I've reviewed, including, for example, the Pandigital Personal Photo Scanner/Converter PanScn06 ($149.99 direct, 3 stars), the PanScn09 enhances its portability by eliminating the need for a computer for scanning. The result is highly portable either way? with or without the dock? and a potentially attractive choice, though with some limitations. But instead of adding an automatic document feeder to a manual-feed scanner, the dock in this case adds a manual feed to a wand scanner (a scanner you roll across the page by hand). Like the Xerox DocuMate 3115 ($399.99 direct, 4 stars) and the Visioneer Strobe 500 ($399.99 direct, 4 stars), which are both Editors' Choices, the Pandigital scanner comes with a dock. The Pandigital Portable Wand Scanner with Feeder Dock (PanScn09) ($119.99 direct) is, well, a little different.
