v0.0.8 (31/08/2000) :
		- It seems that the problem of the missing digit in UPC-E codes
		  is a problem from the CueCat itself. So to compensate, the
		  driver now reconstructs that last digit (the check digit) from
		  the rest of the barcode and appends it to the barcode, so that
		  the final result looks like it comes from a working CueCat.

		- Changed the sample cueact configuration file to use
                  deBarcode instead of the Universal Directory of Commercial
		  Items because deBarcode knows about all kinds of UPC codes
		  where the UDCI seems to know only UPC-A codes.

v0.0.7 (31/08/2000) :
		- Added a SUPPORTED_BARCODE that lists all that is known about
		  what a CueCat can scan and how it does it.

		- Reduced the size of the maximum number of scancodes that the
		  CueCat can send, now that we have determined the limits of
		  what it can scan.

		- Corrected the driver, following Ben Winslow's changes, to
		  make sure the timeout thread is setup properly

		- Added an option in the configuration to enable the driver by
		  default, for people who don't want to enable /proc filesystem
		  support, or don't want to write a small script to enable the
		  driver, for whatever reason.

v0.0.6 (31/08/2000) :
		- Corrected a serious bug where codes with an incomplete
                  trailing triplet would get their last digit(s) corrupted
                  because of a wrong padding for the missing triplet characters.

v0.0.5 (30/08/2000) :
		- Added the new CueAct utility. CueAct is distributed as part
		  of the CueCat driver software. It is in version 0.0.1.

		- Now the kernel driver doesn't allow more than one process
		  to open the device file.

v0.0.4 (28/08/2000) :
		- The kernel driver now measures the timeout between scancodes
		  when decoding a possible barcode, and rejects the ongoing
		  decoding if the scancodes don't come fast enough. As a result,
		  unless someone types on the keyboard while scanning a barcode,
		  (which the driver can't do anything about), it is now quite
		  hard to fool the driver and let a barcode miss the decoder
		  and slip into the console. Also, it means that ALT-F10s are
		  now undetectably slower, instead of being held up in the
		  driver's scancode buffer until the user types something to
		  unblock it.

		- Added proc filesystem support. /proc/cuecat is used to turn
		  the driver on and off by echoing "CC=1" or "CC=0" to it.
		  Also, the driver now starts disabled by default, and it has
		  to be explicitely enabled with /proc/cuecat.

		- The decoder takes care of barcodes with a trailing partial
		  encoded triplet of 3 characters, and tentatively lets those
		  with trailing partial encoded triplets of 1 character, instead
		  of rejecting them. This enables the proper decoding of Michael
		  Rothwell's test barcodes.
		  
v0.0.3 (27/08/2000) :
		- Now the decoder takes care of the last character in a barcode
		  which coded data has a length that is not multiple of 4
		  (typically in ISBN codes).

		- Added '+', '-', and '=' in the scancode table, has '+' and '-'
		  are apparently valid characters from a CueCat (I have never
		  seen coded triplets with these in them though)

		- Updated the README and forked off the credits in a separate
		  CREDITS file

v0.0.2 (26/08/2000) :
		- Barcode decoder totally rewritten as an FSM instead of a flat
		  string parser : the code is a bit more complicated but the
		  architecture is right and allows for precise scancode
		  filtering in the kernel.

		- Changed the silly brain-dead transcoding tables for the nice
		  generic algorithm from Colin Cross (colin@MIT.EDU). Once
		  you understand exactly how it's done, the code immediately
		  becomes more elegant :)

		- Made handle_scancode() in driver/char/keyboard.c reentrant,
		  so the driver can call it back to spit buffered scancodes.

		- Made the driver recognize barcode sequences as early as
		  possible and squelch the normal scancode route when a
		  barcode is coming, so we don't mess the console anymore.

w0.0.1 (24/08/2000) :
		- First release
