Hi,
I have an old pentium 3 machine that I like to keep kicking around for legacy software purposes, and I'm wondering if it's worth it to take advantage of the low priced scanners that used the SCSI interface and came out around the turn of the millennium. Something like a Nikon LS30 was not cheap when it came out (one tier below Nikon's top of the line scanner) but can be picked up today for peanuts (assuming since it uses a SCSI interface rather than USB) and I was wondering if something like this still holds up today.
Can these SCSI scanners still offer good results? Disregarding their outdated interface.
I have an old pentium 3 machine that I like to keep kicking around for legacy software purposes, and I'm wondering if it's worth it to take advantage of the low priced scanners that used the SCSI interface and came out around the turn of the millennium. Something like a Nikon LS30 was not cheap when it came out (one tier below Nikon's top of the line scanner) but can be picked up today for peanuts (assuming since it uses a SCSI interface rather than USB) and I was wondering if something like this still holds up today.
Can these SCSI scanners still offer good results? Disregarding their outdated interface.
Last edited: