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2012
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- Minolta Dimage Scan Multi Ii Film Scanner
- HP ScanJet 7650 Flatbed Scanner with Auto Document...
- Pacific Image Electronics PrimeFilm 1800AFL Film S...
- Logitech Mouse M110 (White)
- PS 410 Black (with micro 2GB included) 600DPI Colo...
- SVP FS1800 Black Digital Film & Slide Scanner w/ 2...
- Epson Perfection 2580 Photo Scanner
- Ion 35mm Negatives and Slides Scanner with SD
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- Epson Perfection 1200U USB Flatbed Scanner
- Canon CanoScan LiDE 50 Color Scanner
- Epson Perfection 4870 PRO Scanner
- PS410 Black 600DPI Colour & Mono HandyScan Handhel...
- HP Scanjet 4850 Photo Scanner (L1950A#B1H)
- Epson Perfection 2480 Photo Flatbed Scanner
- HP ScanJet 4070 PhotoSmart Scanner
- HP ScanJet 5370Cse Scanner
- PrimeFilm PF3610AFL 18-Megapixel Photo Film and Sl...
- Epson Perfection 1240U Color Flatbed Scanner
- Canon CanoScan LiDE 80 Color Scanner
- Canon CanoScan 4200F Flatbed Scanner
- SVP FS1800 Black(16DB SDHC include)Digital Film & ...
- HP Officejet Pro 8500A Wireless e-All-in-One (CM75...
- Pana-Vue Pana-Scan Portable Stand-Alone 35mm Slide...
- SVP FS1700 Black (8GB included)Digital Film Scanne...
- Epson Perfection V100 Photo Scanner (B11B184051)
- HP Scanjet 4370 Photo Scanner (L1970A#B1H)
- New Hp Scanjet G3110 Photo Scanner Energy Star Qua...
- Epson Perfection V200 Color Scanner
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- HP ScanJet 8250 Document Scanner
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January
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Epson Perfection V100 Photo Scanner (B11B184051)
Perfection V100 Photo Scanner
Color: silver Brand: Epson Model: B11B184051 Platforms: Windows, Mac Dimensions: 2.20" h x 11.00" w x 16.90" l, 6.20 pounds Automatic Scanning of photos, slides, negatives, and documents 3200 x9600 dpi scanning one-touch start, copy, scan to E-mail, or scan to PDF Epson Digital Dust correction technology for intelligent dust removal One-click photo restoration with easy photo fix
Most helpful customer reviews 9 of 9 people found the following review helpful. OK for Slides By S. Adams I guess I was lucky - I have scanned over 600 slides without any particular problem in terms of quality or undue cropping. It does 4 at a time which is handy as long as you can use a common setting for all 4. Very slow once beyond 600 dpi. 8 of 8 people found the following review helpful. Very Good Photo Scanner By Don I highly recommend this photo scanner--a great scanner for the money. I purchased the scanner after my old one died and was so amazed with the outstanding quality of the scans, I've started re-scanning all my old 35 mm photos previous scanned. It also comes with a good easy to use scanning/photo editing software package. 18 of 22 people found the following review helpful. Great product, poor design By L. Gray Arguably, Canon and Epson make the best scanners on the market, and flatbed scanners have far greater scanning specs/capabilities over the all-in-one printers. I was in the market because my old Canon 1290F finally died. Last year whin I upgraded the CPU/motherboard, I thought it died but it turns out that it, and the newer Canon, would not work as I learned from their tech support, Canons twain drivers have a problem with AMD/VIA motherboard combos, and contued not to work even after I flashed the bios. I returned the newer Canon, and used the older Canon as it worked on my Intel based laptop. Current day packages on Canons only list Intel CPU's on their minimum requirements, and I wasn't going to take a chance that they corrected their problem. The Epson V100 is an update to the highly positive reviewed 3490, and the published specs are virtually identical. Some of the internals may have been modernized and newer versions of software, but the most obvious change is in it's physical size from the 'soapbar' box design of the 3490. Scans have been excellent, and I am not going to concentrate on them for this review. After all, excellent scans is a minimal expectation. Additionally, set-up was a breeze. What I am going to concentrate on is the lousy design. The designer should be fired, and the entire team should never be allowed near another Epson product. A little harsh, but you will understand. Set up in "portrait" position on the desk wg=hich yould seem to be the most natural as the "EPSON" and other labels are in normal reading position, I can live with the lid opening into me, so I have to reach around to load documents. The worst part is the power and USB cord connections are on the front corner and drape the length back to the back side of the desk. Epson actually puts a warning in the packing/set-up documents NOT to tuck the cords into the groove on the hinge (for a neat appearance) due to electromagnet field interference, but to dangle them out on the desk! The mere fact that they had to make out a special one page document explaining that, should have been a hint to Epson corporate leadership. The first scan I ran, I discovered another odd design quirk. Wondering why the tops of my rebate copies was cut off, discovered the start point was not the upper left corner at the rear, but the lower left corner at the front. This means that the documents are laid out upside down, with the top closest to you. The way I will probably set it up is in "landscape" on the desk, where wires are to the rear, but labels are sideway, and operational buttons will be to the rear right rather than the front right. See all 23 customer reviews...
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