there was a time circuit city was selling a 11x 17 scanner for 88
dollars... it was slow will not run under xp but does work under 98. maybe
it was a mustek a3?
I am sure anyone that upgraded to xp has one sitting on the shelf and it is
unusable to them.
I am going to bring ours back out to scan large magazine ads to go in some
of the radio and computer displays here... will have to throw together an
old system running 98 se though as it WILL NOT run on xp here.
Thanks!
Ed Sharpe Archivist for SMECC
See the Southwest Museum of Engineering, Communications and Computation
online at:
----- Original Message -----
From: "Antonio Carlini" <arcarlini(a)iee.org>
To: <cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>
Sent: Monday, July 14, 2003 10:56 AM
Subject: RE: TIFF to PDF (slightly OT, but for a good cause :-))
I have the
chance to pay some money and get my 17x22" PDP-8/I
schematics scanned, but they only offer TIFF output. These
will be scanned in 400 DPI mode and put on the web. These
are a newer revision than the ones posted on the web.
What I'd *really* like to do is convert them
from TIFF to PDF
and bind them into multi-page PDFs instead of the
one-per-page TIFF files that I'll get from the scanning house.
1-bit depth works for all text that I've come across. Sometimes
8-bit or so helps with photos, but even there I used to scan in
1-bit and rescan those few pages that did not come out too well.
This may not be an option for you.
Once you have the final tiffs, you can convert to G4-encoded
TIFF (maybe they'll come that way anyway if you ask nicely,
worth a try since you are paying!)
Any volunteers? Suggestions for *free* software
than runs on
FreeBSD or, worst case, Windoze?
Well c4topdf will turn G4 encoded TIFF into multipage PDF. It may
turn non-G4 TIFF into G4-TIFF on the fly too, but if it does not,
then ImageMagik will (but seems dreadfully slow to me).
I used Acrobat 5 to do TIFF->G4-TIFF and Acrobat 4 to do multiple
TIFFs to one PDF, but then I was doing this in the office so I
didn't have to shell out for the s/w.
Here in the UK, A3 (really 11x17) scanners are coming down to
reasonable levels. It might be cheaper to buy a scanner and
stand in front of it for an hour than pay commercial rates
to get the job done. Even better, you might find someone
on list offering to do the job if you pay the return
postage (I'd offer but I'm (probably) not in the right
continent and, more importantly, I no longer have access to
a suitable sheet-feed scanner).
Antonio
--
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Antonio Carlini arcarlini(a)iee.org