Robert Stone
Member
For transparency scans I take the result straight out of Nikon Scan / VueScan as tiff file. Color negative is scanned in VueScan but output as a raw tiff file (no adjustment) and then converted to positive within the ColorPerfect software. - www.colorperfect.com - this is worth a look even if you don't use it as there is some good content on the site.
You had reliability issues with the mac mini when trying different web browsers?
Your Mac Pro looks like a very good option for running a scanner. You could always install another more recent operating system on an additional hard drive if you neeeded to at some point. A quick tip, you can do a partial screenshot on Mac OS X with the keyboard shortcut 'command-shift-4' and then drag out the area to be included with the mouse pointer.
Hey Tom,
I think you may have missed some of the discussion here, I’ll catch you up.
VueScan files “straight” with no correction prior to scan were totally unusable, green and dark. Much adjustment and fiddling. Again these weren’t normal scans but scans in tunnels and sunset silhouettes and other difficult lighting and VueScan’s “averaging” wasn’t good at all. Also I suspect some of the negatives had a color shift not just from Long exposure but because it was expired at the time of shooting.
Anyway, the Nikon software really did a much better job of initial averaging as well as more “tools” to correct.
I was also saying that the files that I did scan as examples, were on the hard drive of the initial Mac mini that I had attempted to use with VueScan, and then subsequently tried to install Tiger OS onto, to use the Nikon software. So the drive was wiped and I didn’t save the scans elsewhere. I had a hard time finding a viable copy of Tiger that would run on an intel chip, and figuring out how to install it from a USB drive instead of actual install DVD since I don’t have any blank writeable DVD’s here. I scraped that idea and bought a Mac Pro with Tiger installed.
The WHOLE POINT is to KEEP tiger, and not upgrade, because Nikon’s software isn’t supported past Tiger and doesn’t run. So it was the most modern OS that still ran the software. It’s also a great bridge because tiger also runs OS 9 so if I ever need to run something old I have that option.
I know how to screen shot, but I didn’t want to them have to transfer that off of the computer, since it’s a process and the browser doesn’t work for the website, when I could just use my cell phone, which is where I was posting the reply from anyway, I know it’s not an ideal photo, it’s readable, so I figured it was good enough. The Tiger OS no longer supports modern browsing and doesn’t read modern HTML5/CSS code and I was having trouble finding a browser that has been updated to read that, the only one that exists seems to be only for power PC’s and not written for this interim Tiger OS that runs on the intel chip.
I’m not really using it for browsing so it’s fine, and when I need to transfer Scanned files I can either hook up via wifi or hard wire it with a fire wire cable in target disk mode, so that works well.
All-in-all I’m pretty set at this point. It’s really nice for you to try and help. The Nikon software really is much more user friendly and works better with the scanner since it was intended for this as proprietary.
Even if I didn’t need the computer for scanning, the Mac Pro is too old to be useful for anything else, so there’s no point in upgrading it. As a “sad” comparison, my 11” MacBook Air is faster and runs photoshop CC 2020 / LR Better than the pro could. So it’s just a clunker that does the one thing I need, and I’m satisfied with that.
Thanks
