| Below is a list of articles with the most recent ones listed first. |
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How to Choose a Computer Scanner by MDofPC |
Topic: Scanners |
| Computer scanners are becoming important pieces of equipment for scanning old notes, textbooks and pictures |
| Published: Sunday 26 April, 2009 |
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Turning The Casual Scanner Into A Buyer by MDofPC |
Topic: Scanners |
| How can you turn the casual scanner into an active reader? More importantly, how can we turn a scanner into a buyer? First, ensure that your headlines can stand alone, without the support of other sentences. For most, that means getting rid of those one-word headlines. Headlines should include the b... |
| Published: Tuesday 14 April, 2009 |
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Comparison Of Different Scanning Methods by MDofPC |
Topic: Scanners |
| Today, Scanner art has got great advantage in various fields. Scanner art is art made by placing objects on a flatbed scanner and scanning them. There are lots more other varieties like drum, flatbed, film and hand scanners. |
| Published: Saturday 17 January, 2009 |
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Scanners - Part I by MDofPC |
Topic: Scanners |
| Digital imaging has come of age. Equipment that was once reserved for the wealthiest bureaux is now commonplace on the desktop. The powerful PCs required to manipulate digital images are now considered entry level, so it comes as no surprise to learn that scanners, the devices used to get images int... |
| Published: Wednesday 25 April, 2007 |
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Scanners - Part II by MDofPC |
Topic: Scanners |
| PMT is the sensor technology used by the high-end drum scanners used by colour prepress companies. Expensive and difficult to operate, these were the devices used to load images into a computer before the advent of desktop scanning.CCD technology is responsible for having made scanning a desktop app... |
| Published: Wednesday 25 April, 2007 |
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Scanners - Part III by MDofPC |
Topic: Scanners |
| Resolution relates to the fineness of detail that a scanner can achieve, and is usually measures in dots per inch (dpi). The more dots per inch a scanner can resolve, the more detail the resulting image will have. The typical resolution of an inexpensive desktop scanner in the late 1990s was 300 x 3... |
| Published: Wednesday 25 April, 2007 |
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Scanners - Part IV by MDofPC |
Topic: Scanners |
| Scanners typically offer resolutions of 2,400dpi, 4,800dpi and 9,600dpi. Its important to realise that scanners simply aren't capable of picking up this level of detail. The actual optical resolution of the CCDs in most modern scanners is 600 x 1,200dpi at best and all higher figures are based on in... |
| Published: Wednesday 25 April, 2007 |
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Scanners - Part V by MDofPC |
Topic: Scanners |
| When a scanner converts something into digital form, it looks at the image pixel by pixel and records what it sees. That part of the process is simple enough, but different scanners record different amounts of information about each pixel. How much information a given scanner records is measured by ... |
| Published: Wednesday 25 April, 2007 |
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Scanners - Part VI by MDofPC |
Topic: Scanners |
| PCs represent pictures in a variety of ways - the most common methods being are line art, halftone, greyscale, and colour.
The format in which a scanned image is saved can have a significant effect on file size - and file size is an important consideration when scanning, since the high resolutions ... |
| Published: Wednesday 25 April, 2007 |
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Scanners - Part VII by MDofPC |
Topic: Scanners |
| Surprisingly TWAIN is not an acronym, but a very important standard in image acquisition, developed by Hewlett-Packard, Kodak, Aldus, Logitech and Caere which specifies how image acquisition devices such as scanners, digital cameras and other devices transfer data to software applications. TWAIN all... |
| Published: Wednesday 25 April, 2007 |
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