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Do You Scan On Your Mac? Use The Best Software.
What’s the best Mac software for scanning? Is it what comes with the scanner? Nope. It’s Silverfast Ai Studio. Scanners have become something like printers. These days they’re fast and cheap. While a very good scanner can cost hundreds of dollars, very cheap scanners do credible scans. For those of us involved in high volume, good quality scans, our software of choice is usually NOT the software that came with the scanner, unless it’s SilverFast, which is becoming the defacto standard. The Mac has a handful of scanner software, usually the stuff that came with the scanner, whether it be HP, Epson, Canon or something else. Depending on your needs and how much money you’re willing to devote to software, SilverFast seems to have something for everyone.
Scanners are really precision instruments so you need software that’s equally precision oriented. SilverFast is published by LaserSoft Imaging in Germany. Very expensive scanners usually ship with their own scanner software. For low-end to mid-range use, SilverFast is the choice. Why? Precision. Features. Ease of use. Dependability. SilverFast comes in a variety of versions starting with SilverFast SE 6.5, which we use on most of the scanners in our office, though not all. It costs $49 and is available by download online. SE is the entry-level scanner software which features a number of automatic functions to make complicated scanning seem easy. SE comes with a preview feature and works with scanners than handle negatives. It also works as simple standalone software, or as a plug-in for Adobe Photoshop. What do you get for less? A simple interface. Tools on the left, scanner image on the right. The Mode lets you choose between Standard and other settings. SE has real-time color correction, grain and noise reduction, dust and scratch removal, color restoration for old photos, auto sharpening, negative optimization, and an exposure slider. SE outputs TIFF and JPEG images and has some color correction. Up the list a couple of notches is the SilverFast Ai version which we use on a couple of scanners in the office. At $120 you get all the features of SE, plus 48-bit real-time correction, an Expert interface, an Unsharp Masking Preview, color correction of six or 12 colors with masking capability built-in? Wait. There’s more. The Ai version also comes with grain and noise elimination, CMYK preview, and more file formats. The feature we use the most is batch processing. Double the price again and you get SiilverFast Ai Studio, with even more features, including multi-sampling, auto-alignment the ability to increase dynamic range, handy to pull detail from shadows without damaging highlights. Wait. There’s more. My biggest complaint with SilverFast is the bewildering array of software options. There’s SE, SE Plus, Ai, Ai Studio. In between are various Calibration versions known as IT8 for ultra high quality paper targets; higher dynamic range, higher cost. There’s even an x-ray version of SilverFast for the medical community. That’s right. Your doctor can use a scanner to digitize an x-ray of whatever you have that needs x-raying.
SilverFast SE is what ships with many low-end and mid-range scanners these days, but LaserSoft lets you upgrade from one version to another. For example, move from SE to SE Plus for as low as $30. The basic user interface tools are straightforward at every level. For Basic and SE, select Mode, select the type of image, for example, a photograph, add a filter, and select the quality (dots per inch). A slider moves left or right to zoom out and in. Brightness, contrast and saturation can be controlled prior to the scan. Once the settings are in place, scanning is a simple matter of selecting pre-scan, then click the Scan button. Once an image is scanned, save it to your Mac in the desired file format. The LaserSoft web site has plenty of documentation, including movies which you can download to view how to use high end features and functions. Mac users have limited choices when it comes to scanners these days. Fortunately, SilverFast, in whatever version, is a perfect complement to most low-end and mid-range requirements. Off Topic Note: Are you ready for a new web site that’s all about Apple? AppleHits covers the Mac, iPhone, iPod, and everything else that’s a hit at Apple. Click here for AppleHits. Have you ever noticed how much Apple’s “I’m a Mac, I’m a PC” television commercials remind you of Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote? Seriously. • Article by Kate MacKenzie • Published on Wednesday, April 2, 2008
• Category: Software • 11 Reader comment(s) • Email This • Shop Now •
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Talk Back to the folks at Mac360 Art says:
I have always used Vuescan. The updates are OPTIONAL. It’s like watching a program on tv that you don’t like. Turn it off or turn the channel. No complaints for aggressive updates here. Vuescan doesn’t splatter stuff all over your hard drive, as far as I know. It’s a small App and very easy to use. The interface is not as nice as SilverFast, from what I can see on their site, however. — Posted on Wed Apr 02 at 5:26 pm by Art
Ian Orchard says:
My first choice for scanning is good ol’ Image Capture, buried deep in your Applications folder (Tiger and Leopard, maybe earlier). It doesn’t have the bells and whistles of the commercial stuff, but it handles everything I ask of it. You have to have your scanner connected and running when it launches or it will just grumble at you. Most folk assume it is for pulling images off a digicam, but it’s a useful scanning tool too. — Posted on Wed Apr 02 at 2:35 pm by Ian Orchard
dbhill says:
Well, dbcooper, now you see why I asked. I use ReadIris v.11 for Mac; it’s the best I’ve found. Yet it is not near good enough for regular office use. I always cringe at the hours of editing the OCR output. The best I can say is that it’s better than nothing. ~Dennis — Posted on Wed Apr 02 at 2:09 pm by dbhill
dbcooper says:
Ugh, I hate OCR. Optical character recognition is one of those painful utilities we use at work which drives us nuts. It never, ever, never, never works right. Having to use it borders on employee abuse. If you find one that works, write about it in bold headlines. — Posted on Wed Apr 02 at 1:03 pm by dbcooper
dbhill says:
How can you talk about scanner software and not mention Optical Character Recognition (OCR). Do you not use OCR in your office? If so, I’d thrill to your thoughts about this, or write an article about it. ~Dennis — Posted on Wed Apr 02 at 12:57 pm by dbhill
Cathy Wills says:
We use SilverFast in our photography studio. Best by far for high resolution scans. One of the problems we had with Vue Scan was the constant updates. It’s like there’s a new version every week. Sometimes a new version wouldn’t work on a scanner that worked fine the week before. Both are good, but we prefer SilverFast Ai Studio. It costs a little more but causes no pain. — Posted on Wed Apr 02 at 11:57 am by Cathy Wills
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