This is a very unpopular point of view, but my thoughts exactly. I try, I
upgrade, I mess around for a while finding out what has changed, I lose a
scan or two due to overwriting or wrong settings, I do a perfect scan and
find it is no better than I get from Nikonscan with much less effort
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Enoch's Vision,
Inc. (Cary Enoch R...)
Sent: 05 October 2001 22:47
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: filmscanners: Nikonscan and dual processors
[cut]
In Win2K it's simple to set an application to use
PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: filmscanners: Nikonscan and dual processors
NikonScan's GUI is amazingly simple, especially for full roll
scanning. It
gives a full roll prescan of thumbnails which allows you to select and
rotate frames you want to scan. It's much less hassle than
manually typing
: filmscanners: Nikonscan and dual processors
At 20:18 05-10-01 -0700, you wrote:
Just got this back from Nikon:
It is known by Nikon that there are problems with Dual Processor PC's,
both
Windows and Mac. Although the Product Brochures do not specifically say
the 2CPU machines will not work
Cary writes:
[Nikon] really need to hire professional
development people instead of those high
school interns they're using.
I've had exactly the same thoughts concerning them in the past. Their NikonScan
has always looked like something designed by a high-school student: a fancy
Just got this back from Nikon:
It is known by Nikon that there are problems with Dual Processor PC's,
both
Windows and Mac. Although the Product Brochures do not specifically say
the 2CPU machines will not work, neither do they say it does. Dual
Processors are good but only for applications
At 20:18 05-10-01 -0700, you wrote:
Just got this back from Nikon:
It is known by Nikon that there are problems with Dual Processor PC's,
both
Windows and Mac. Although the Product Brochures do not specifically say
the 2CPU machines will not work, neither do they say it does.
That's a bunch
something, which is
usually a bad sign.
- Original Message -
From: PAUL GRAHAM [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, October 06, 2001 05:18
Subject: filmscanners: Nikonscan and dual processors
Just got this back from Nikon:
It is known by Nikon that there are problems