Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-04 Thread Ron Carlson
It works on my wife's Win 98 SE machine and her SCSI flat bed. Regards, Ron - Original Message - From: "B.Rumary" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Monday, June 04, 2001 9:29 AM Subject: Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs

Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-04 Thread Ron Carlson
- From: "James Grove" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Sunday, June 03, 2001 11:50 PM Subject: RE: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB ) > I dont think that will work, as many SCSI devices have to be seen by the > SCSI BIOS on b

Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-04 Thread Maris V. Lidaka, Sr.
I tried this today and it worked for me - I'm running Windows 98SE Maris - Original Message - From: "B.Rumary" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Monday, June 04, 2001 11:29 AM Subject: Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs

Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-04 Thread Lynn Allen
as soon as the device is turned on or plugged in (USB only--don't try this with SCISI). Best regards--LRA --Original Message-- From: "B.Rumary" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: June 4, 2001 4:29:12 PM GMT Subject: Re: filmscanners: which scanne

Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-04 Thread Lynn Allen
t: Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB ) In <01c0ecc2$a1908ef0$6401a8c0@jamesg>, James Grove wrote: > I dont think that will work, as many SCSI devices have to be seen by the > SCSI BIOS on boot up. > It certainly does *not* work on my Windows 98 machine - t

Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-04 Thread Verbeke Jean-Pierre
Well it works without any problem for now one year on my W2k machine with sp2 installed... Jean-Pierre - Original Message - From: "B.Rumary" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Monday, June 04, 2001 6:29 PM Subject: Re: filmscanners: which scanner

Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-04 Thread Moreno Polloni
> I dont think that will work, as many SCSI devices have to be seen by the > SCSI BIOS on boot up. Have you tried it? I've been using that method for years. It works about 95% of the time.

Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-04 Thread Rob Geraghty
"James Grove" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I dont think that will work, as many SCSI devices have to be seen by the > SCSI BIOS on boot up. It works with my LS30 and the Scanjet IIIc. Scanners shouldn't be a problem. The most likely devices that would need to be seen at SCSI BIOS load would be

RE: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-04 Thread David Chun
kewl... i stand corrected. well I learn something new everyday... thanks... -Dave. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Ron Carlson Sent: Sunday, June 03, 2001 10:32 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: filmscanners: which scanner for

Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-04 Thread geoff murray
That works on mine. Geoff - Original Message - From: "James Grove" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Monday, June 04, 2001 4:50 PM Subject: RE: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB ) > I dont think that will work, as man

Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-04 Thread Richard N. Moyer
"Hot Swappable means only one thing: It can be plugged/un-plugged while the computer (and the cable connection) is in operation and active. Firewire (1394) and USB have that property. SCSI does not, although you can optain special connectors that allow hot-swappability at those connections, bu

Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-04 Thread B.Rumary
In <01c0ecc2$a1908ef0$6401a8c0@jamesg>, James Grove wrote: > I dont think that will work, as many SCSI devices have to be seen by the > SCSI BIOS on boot up. > It certainly does *not* work on my Windows 98 machine - the SCSI devices all have to be on at boot-up. Brian Rumary, England http:

RE: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-04 Thread James Grove
Ron Carlson Sent: 04 June 2001 06:32 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB ) If you want to turn on your SCSI device after your computer is already booted, No problem. Just right click on MY COMPUTER, left click on properties,select DEVICE Manager

Re: filmscanners: which scanner for slides ? ( SCSI vs USB )

2001-06-03 Thread Ron Carlson
If you want to turn on your SCSI device after your computer is already booted, No problem. Just right click on MY COMPUTER, left click on properties,select DEVICE Manager tab and left click on REFRESH and then OK. This is for a windows machine. I don't know what you need to do for an Apple machin