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colourb.asc
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1989-12-31
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4KB
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177 lines
==========================
Falcon Review: ColourBurst
==========================
The first colour hand scanner has arrived for the Falcon
030. The ColourBurst scanner allows you to take scans in 256
colours or, if you want to put the Falcon and ColourBurst to
their limits, true colour mode. If you want to use this
scanner with your Falcon, you need to have at least 4Mb of
RAM and a hard drive. It isn't necessary to have a hard
driv, but 256 and true colour scans take up a lot of space.
And I mean a lot! The software works with all monitors
(except monochrome), although VGA is best.
When you look at the hardware, you notice a big difference.
Instead of being grey and black, the ColourBurst is all
black and is rounded. In fact it looks better than most hand
scanners. Although this scanning head seems a little pricey
at £400, flatbed scanning can cost up to £800 - so don't
grumble.
No matter how good the scanning head looks, the interface
leaves a lot to be desired. Instead of plugging into the
Falcon's cartridge port, it plugs into the parallel printer
port. It certainly doesn't do any nice cosmetic changes for
your system; the interface has a ribbon cable leading to the
adaptor which then goes into the printer port. it's all a
bit of a mess. Also, you obviously can't use your printer if
your using the ColourKit software. If you want to use a
printer with the software, you need to get hold of a
parallel switchbox, but, apparently, the scanner isn't
compatible with all switchboxes. Oh well....
Now onto the software. When loading ColourKit, you have the
choice of scanning in Super Colour mode (262,114 colours;
true colour mode), Colour mode (4,096 colours), Monochrome
Grey mode (64 levels of greyscales) and Monochrome Text mode
which scans text for OCR (Optical Character Recognition) and
line art (pictures which have no shades in them). Apart from
Super Colour mode, all the other modes work in 256 colour
mode.
After setting the screen mode from the Set Video option on
the desktop, you can load up the software. Be warned; when
scanning you need to be very slow, and steady. A scanning
tray would help matters a lot. If you scan too fast, things
will come out squashed, and if you don't scan steadily
you'll end up with slanting scans! You do get used to it,
though, believe me....
When you actually start getting the hang of things,
brilliant scans can be produced; especially in true colour
mode. Of course, the higher the resolution you use, and the
more colours you scan in, the better the picture quality.
And of course, the more memory you eat up. If you really
want to get good scans, you should wait about 40 seconds for
the scanning head to "warm up" before each scan. Before
doing your first scan, it's almost compulsory to let the
scanning head to "warm up" for two minutes.
Once you've got the picture on screen, you can then save it
as a Targa or TIFF image. You can crop the image, and only
save that part to prevent eating up precious disk space; a
true colour scan at 300 dpi can use up to 1.5Mb!! You really
do need that hard drive....
Overall, this package is a good one. You really won't find
much better for £400; in fact this is the only colour hand
scanner around to date. If you're into art or DTP, I'd
advise buying this. It really is worth the money.
From: Gasteiner
Contact: 081 345 6000
Price: £400
The Uppers.....
---------------
* Brilliant quality scans
* Cheap for what you get
* Saves in standard picture formats
* Cropping function to save only PARTS of the image
* User friendly
and the Downers
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* You have to wait for the head to warm up
* Nasty interface
Overall: 90% * Silver Star Award *