About 9 years ago I bought a new computer as my general purpose desktop machine; it came preloaded with Windows Vista as an OS and I used it for browsing, e-mail negative scanning on my Minolta Scan Dual II and document scanning with a Canon LIDE35. I used the free version of Vuescan for negatives/slides and the Windows Canoscan application for the LIDE35.
Vista was a turkey of an OS from the very start and is not now supported for many applications like Firefox and Norton anti-virus. As I'm technically competent with software and hardware and components like hard drives with moving parts, DVD drives that fit in bays and memory in an old format of stick, can be had for buttons, I added another hard drive, 2nd DVD reader/writer and 3GB of memory for very little money. I then put Linux (Ubuntu) on the new-to-me hard drive and am more than happy with the improvement over Vista. Everything is free and open source. I was happy to pay the upgrade fee for Vuescan Professional and it works just as well as the Windows version I was used to.
The one thing I miss from the Windows setup is that I used to use Picasa as the quick and dirty Photoshop. It cropped, straightened, retouched and exported to a selection of sizes for my negative scans. InLinux there is no such equivalent. GIMP will do the job but has so may buttons, sliders and bells and whistles, it's not quick to use. The default image viewer in Linux and Shotwell aren't as powerful as Picasa, so does anyone know of a mid-range equivalent for Linux?
The Canoscan Windows software which came on a CD/DVD had no Linux application. I liked Canoscan as it did a quick preview and automatically suggested a cropped area to scan at hi-res, which was great if I'd put a postcard size photo on the document scanner. Xsane and Simple-Scanner are the two application I can use to scan under Linux but both scan the whole A4 size area to stat with.The simple scanner does at least have a crop tool to cut down the image before saving to disk. Can anyone suggest a Linux application which does something to Canoscan?
Vista was a turkey of an OS from the very start and is not now supported for many applications like Firefox and Norton anti-virus. As I'm technically competent with software and hardware and components like hard drives with moving parts, DVD drives that fit in bays and memory in an old format of stick, can be had for buttons, I added another hard drive, 2nd DVD reader/writer and 3GB of memory for very little money. I then put Linux (Ubuntu) on the new-to-me hard drive and am more than happy with the improvement over Vista. Everything is free and open source. I was happy to pay the upgrade fee for Vuescan Professional and it works just as well as the Windows version I was used to.
The one thing I miss from the Windows setup is that I used to use Picasa as the quick and dirty Photoshop. It cropped, straightened, retouched and exported to a selection of sizes for my negative scans. InLinux there is no such equivalent. GIMP will do the job but has so may buttons, sliders and bells and whistles, it's not quick to use. The default image viewer in Linux and Shotwell aren't as powerful as Picasa, so does anyone know of a mid-range equivalent for Linux?
The Canoscan Windows software which came on a CD/DVD had no Linux application. I liked Canoscan as it did a quick preview and automatically suggested a cropped area to scan at hi-res, which was great if I'd put a postcard size photo on the document scanner. Xsane and Simple-Scanner are the two application I can use to scan under Linux but both scan the whole A4 size area to stat with.The simple scanner does at least have a crop tool to cut down the image before saving to disk. Can anyone suggest a Linux application which does something to Canoscan?
Something like DarkTable might have more functionality than you would use but then you don't have to use all of it.
Nobody really minds whether you dumpster dive for hard drives, but you did come out with some daft stuff.