Alexander Meijer alexander.meijer at gmail.com writes:
Hi,
Hi,
Sorry for the late follow-up.
I have the same scanner and the same problem.
I recently moved from XP to Ubuntu, (XP gave perfect white scans)
is there a final solution for this 'blue problem' in Ubuntu ?
This is a known
Hi,
I have the same scanner and the same problem.
I recently moved from XP to Ubuntu, (XP gave perfect white scans)
is there a final solution for this 'blue problem' in Ubuntu ?
thanks
Alexander
Hi,
On Friday 11 May 2012 22:13:22 2cv67 wrote:
On 10/05/12 01:43, Olaf Meeuwissen wrote:
You may get improved results with Image Scan! for Linux when selecting
Color Document (or B/W Document) for the Image Type.
This white correction is not done by the device. It is all done in a
On 11/05/12 23:22, K?re S?rs wrote:
With the latest release of Skanlite (0.8), all the settings are saved on exit
and loaded the next time you start. So if you change color correction settings
they will be the same the next time you run Skanlite (they can be reverted to
defaults). I think the
On Saturday 12 May 2012 13:57:22 2cv67 wrote:
On 11/05/12 23:22, K?re S?rs wrote:
With the latest release of Skanlite (0.8), all the settings are saved on
exit and loaded the next time you start. So if you change color
correction settings they will be the same the next time you run Skanlite
On 12/05/12 16:08, K?re S?rs wrote:
2. After correction (+10% brightness +10% contrast could be about
right) then impossible to select the scan area for a document, which
then appears as numerous fragments...
That sounds like a bug somewhere... could the fragments be automatically
selected
Le 10/05/2012 01:43, Olaf Meeuwissen a ?crit :
You may get improved results with Image Scan! for Linux when selecting
Color Document (or B/W Document) for the Image Type.
This white correction is not done by the device. It is all done in a
non-free software component used by the iscan
On 10/05/12 01:43, Olaf Meeuwissen wrote:
You may get improved results with Image Scan! for Linux when selecting
Color Document (or B/W Document) for the Image Type.
This white correction is not done by the device. It is all done in a
non-free software component used by the iscan frontend.
emmanuel.michel at wanadoo.fr emmanuel.michel at wanadoo.fr writes:
Le 09/05/2012 10:21, 2cv67 a ?crit :
These are the examples used in the above post:
Uncorrected:
http://s838.photobucket.com/albums/zz309/2CV67/?action=viewcurrent=xs_normal.jpg
Corrected:
On 08/05/12 21:36, emmanuel.michel at wanadoo.fr wrote:
Unfortunately I don't have quality equipment, calibrated monitor or
stuff like that to confirm your problem. If white is not perfect, at
least it does not look noticeably blue on my screen.
Can you please send one of your white scan as
Le 09/05/2012 10:21, 2cv67 a ?crit :
These are the examples used in the above post:
Uncorrected:
http://s838.photobucket.com/albums/zz309/2CV67/?action=viewcurrent=xs_normal.jpg
Corrected:
http://s838.photobucket.com/albums/zz309/2CV67/?action=viewcurrent=xs_white.jpg
Or did you want them
I asked this question a long time ago on Ubuntu Forum, with no result.
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1576401
Probably this is a more suitable spot?
I have an Epson Perfection V200 Photo scanner.
It works as you would expect in XP, whites come out white, automatically.
In Ubuntu
Le 08/05/2012 21:19, 2cv67 a ?crit :
I asked this question a long time ago on Ubuntu Forum, with no result.
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1576401
Probably this is a more suitable spot?
I have an Epson Perfection V200 Photo scanner.
It works as you would expect in XP, whites come
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