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Date: | Wed, 1 Jun 1994 06:28:56 GMT |
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David Smith wrote....
>WE have an analog slide maker. You input the RGB image from the
>confocal (loop through the monitor) and print the image on the
>screen. This is very nice for printing what is on the screen but
>has the limitation of not being digital so it doesn't work with
>files that have been enhanced in say an adobe program.
> We have a Dunn Instruments "Microcolor". It projects the
>image on a small screen(~4" square - 4000 lines) and photographs
>it with a 35mm camera. I can provide more info if anyone needs it.
>Hope this helps dave smith [log in to unmask]
>
Thank you Dave for the information.
We are just now considering to purchace a similar kind of slide maker as
Dunn Instruments "Microcolor" but one that is sold by Polaroid. It's a lower
priced one ( Price abouth 1000-2000 US dollars).. The Machine is called
Quick Print and it is able to grab and print imagest up to 800 x 600 (0 up
to 31 kHz) display. How about Dunn Instruments "Microcolor" can it handle
higher resolutions. We would like to print images from two monitors with the
same printer (One is a normal VGA signal and the other is a higher
resolution one (resolution 1200x1000 or something near this) where we
display 4 images simultaneously . The 1200x100 is too high a resolution for
at least Polaroid printer, so we have desider to use an additional frame
grabber to get out one image at a time in standard video resolution.
Polaroid works just fine in our case ecxept that the height and width of the
image is different with different sources.
Ari Kuusisto
Medical Physics, The University of Turku
e-mail: [log in to unmask]
My best regards
Ari Kuusisto
Wallac Oy
PO BOX 10
FIN-20101 TURKU,
FINLAND
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