While these VFD displays work out of the box, it can be helpful to have the documentation if you want to utilize some of the advanced features, such as custom characters. There is also a VFD_Setup utility that provides the ability to configure several parameters, such as increasing the default 9600 8/N/1 to 19200 for a bit faster transfer speed if desired.
These displays are referred to as LD220 in the literature. There are apparently several industry standard protocols used in Point-Of-Sale devices - I found the best for general PC use is 'Ultimate' - the configuration utility allows you to specify what protocol the display uses. These are predominantly things like terminal control codes to move the cursor around (home, locate, etc) and blink, reverse etc. The documentation describes the control codes for each protocol.
Again - none of that is really needed if you just want to spit out text to the display. But for clocks and such you may want to incorporate locating the cursor to the positions being updated rather than re--writing the entire string.
If I did things correctly you will need a password to get to my files - the pw is neonixie ;-)