Showing posts with label amazing scanners. Show all posts
Showing posts with label amazing scanners. Show all posts

Monday, October 25, 2010

HP’s Scanjet G3110 Scanner

HP’s Scanjet G3110 is a flatbed scanner with a built-in transparency adapter suitable for small slide and film scanning projects. The scanner features an optical resolution of 4800 dpi and 48-bit colors. And while its color accuracy and ability to capture fine detail were impressive, its scan speeds were anything but.
The G3110 has a dark gray body and a shiny and curved, off-white lid. Four buttons built into the lid allow you to scan to file, PDF, to email or to a printer (copy). The transparency adapter allows you to scan a single 35mm filmstrip or four individual slides. You connect the scanner to your Mac via USB 2.0.

HP Scanjet G3110
HP’s scanning software strategy can be a bit confusing. Stand-alone scanners continue to use HP Scan software under Snow Leopard, though the scanners in HP’s MFP’s rely on OS X’s Image Capture app for Snow Leopard scans. HP’s standalone scanners curiously don’t support Image Capture.


Scale = Superior, Very Good, Good, Fair, Poor
Using HP Scan can take a little getting used to, as it operates differently than most scanning applications. Instead of starting with a low resolution preview scan that you apply crops and adjustment settings to before performing your final scan, HP scans the whole 8.5 by 11 inch scanning bed. You then make your adjustments and save the file.
While the HP software worked just fine during our evaluation, this scanning workflow probably contributed to its lagging scanning times. It took the Scanjet G3110 1 minute and 50 seconds to scan an 8 by 10 inch color photo at 600 dpi and 48-bit color. Competing scanners we’ve tested recently took about 40 seconds to complete the same scan. A 4-by-6 photo scanned at 1200 dpi and 48-bit color took 2 minutes and 32 seconds, a task that other scanners completed in about 1 minute 18 seconds. A transparency scan of a 35mm slide at 2400 dpi and 48-bits took 5 minutes 15 seconds.
The good news is that the resulting scans were of impressive quality. We printed our test scans on Epson’s Stylus Photo 2200 color inkjet printer, and the results showed that the G3110 did a very good at capturing both color and fine details. Colors in a scan our standard 8-by-10 test photo were very close to the original and many of the details were captured, even those in shadow areas that many scanners struggle with. A scan or our resolution test chart also showed the G3110’s ability to resolve very fine lines. Even the transparency scan was impressive, not requiring the kind of image editor tweaks that many flatbed transparency scan need.

Visioneer Strobe 500 Document Scanner




















 There's nothing new about a portable device that you can plug into a dock to use as a desktop unit too. Lots of laptops have let you do that for years. Somehow, though, the idea of a scanner doing the same thing seems like an exciting new trick, and it's the one feature in the Visioneer Strobe 500 ($399.99 direct) that's most likely to grab your attention. It firmly plants the scanner in two separate categories—portable and personal desktop document scanner. Ultimately, though, it's best appreciated as a capable desktop scanner first and a portable only as a decidedly secondary role.

The scanner comes mounted in its docking station, which includes a 20-page automatic document feeder (ADF) and an output tray. The combination of the two is about the same size as a typical personal desktop scanner, with an 11.7- by 4.7-inch (WD) footprint, not including the output tray.

Canon imageFormula DR-2020U Scanners




















 The Canon imageFormula DR-2020U ($645 direct) looks like nothing so much as a neatly sawed off top section from a desktop laser MFP—a flatbed scanner, automatic document feeder (ADF), front panel buttons, and LCD for menu text, with no printer attached. More important, the similarity extends to a deeper level as well, with a focus on scanning documents. However, the DR-2020U is a far better document scanner than most MFPs, and better in many ways than most similarly priced document scanners as well. If you need a flatbed document scanner for a small office or workgroup, it definitely belongs near the top of your short list.
The DR-2020U offers lots of impressive features, including reasonably fast scans in general and exceptionally fast scans to searchable PDF files, but two features in particular make it unusually capable for the price.
Setup and Software
Basic setup for the scanner is easy. The DR-2020U measures 7.1 by 17.3 by 15.8 inches (HWD). Despite the relatively large footprint, it's short enough so that if you can afford to give up the space on your desktop, you won't feel like it's towering over you. Like the GT-1500, it's designed to sit in landscape orientation, as seen from the front, with the front panel on one long side, and the lid opening towards the back.

Scanning with Ease
The DR-2020U lets you start a scan from the scan command in a program, from either of Canon's scan utilities or from a front-panel button. One particularly nice touch is that in addition to three scan buttons—Copy, File, and E-mail—the front panel also offers an LCD-based menu you can scroll through to pick from a list of predefined scan jobs.
For each definition, you can define settings that include file type (including image PDF, searchable PDF, BMP, TIFF, and JPG), color mode, resolution, and whether to scan in simplex (one side of a page), duplex, or duplex but skipping blank pages.
Most document scanners offer a similar feature, but they typically limit you to either 9 or 10 definitions and show the choices only as numbers. Canon lets you define up to 50 scan jobs—an enormous number—and give them descriptive names that show on the LCD menu. Instead of having to memorize which number goes with which type of scan, you can simply scroll through the list to pick the definition you want to use.
 

Latest CanoScan 9000F scanner

Canon CanoScan 9000F Color Image Scanner Reviews
It is CanoScan 9000F scanner, the perfect machine for perfect result. Canon seems really serious in manufacturing its product, including this scanner. The significant improvement seen through this latest scanner compared to the older machines is the high-speed it offers. You can get quality result of photos or documents you scan since CanoScan gives remarkable maximum film scanning resolution of 9600 x 9600 optical dpi1.
Canon equips this 9000F with Auto Document Fix that enables the exact analysis and correction of all the images or texts you are about to scan so the result delivered will not be disappointing. The result of the scanned pictures will as well be presenting good color tone and contrast and the text you scan will have clearer result.

Plustek P60 compact photo scanner

With 2.3-inch x 6.9-inch x 1.5-inch Plustek SmartPhoto P60 photo scanner, it can help you scan a 4-inch x 6-inch photo quickly and easy to use this machine. It’s weigh 0.4lbs and has one button to action scan progress and also take 10 seconds to complete one page.
Plustek SmartPhoto P60 is an easy to use photo scanner for people looking to digitize and share their printed photographs. Simple one button operation lets you scan photos and send them to your computer without the need for any complicated computer software. Simply plug the scanner into your PC or Mac, insert any photo up to 4″x6″ in the scanner. Press the button and the photo is digitized and sent to your computer. Your photograph is easily shared using email or any popular on line photo sharing service.
It’s can work with both Mac and PC computers as well and connect with computer via USB port.


Canon has announced the CanoScan high-end scanner in Japan.The new Canon 9000F features 9600dpi CCD sensor with 48-bit color depth.
The device is capable to scan up to four 35mm slides or 12 35mm filmstrips at once. It also comes with Film Automatic Retouching and Enhancement Level 3 technology to remove dust and scratches.
The CanoScan 9000F will be available in market from July for 25980 Yen.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Latest Scanner Can store 35mm Photo Slides


There must be millions of photo slides stuffed into old boxes and most of them not any good either, but this device can rectify that, it is a scanner that uses the Kodak Digital Image Enhancement software to restore the slide back to its original standard.
It is a little pricey, so the device is more of investment than a hobby, but it can manage fifty slides at one go and each slide takes around two minutes to scan and restore back to its original standard.

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