User`s manual
ENGLISH
25
ENGLISH
24
STEP 4 – Set Scan Settings
1. After clicking on the “Scan“ button icon, a “Scan to le“ setup dialog box will
appear:
NOTE: The default scan-to directory is C:\Users\YOUR USER’S NAME\Pictures.
To change the location, select “Browse” and choose a new destination to save the les.
2. Editing of the image before saving can also be done by clicking on the
“Image Adjustment“ icon, (for more see “Advanced scanning options“).
STEP 3 – Optional Prescan
Pre-Scanning should be used to manually adjust color/edit settings before doing
a nal scan.
1. In the CyberView interface click on the “Prescan” menu bar icon. The scanner
will initialize the prescanning process.
2. Once the prescan is complete, the image will appear in the CyberView
interface:
3. When the image appears on the screen, select the “Final scan icon“ to scan the
le into a folder on the hard drive.
STEP 5 – Scan
Choose “Base le name” to label the scanned les. The default name “image” can be
changed based on user’s choice, ex.: 120 scans, slides, etc.
Scans can be made in sequential order with “User dened start number“.
NOTE: CyberView will keep track of the numbering regardless of the scan to
directory, (Ex.: Creating folders by scan category “Germany”, “France”, “Italy” etc., 25
images will be scanned into folder “Germany” and then change to the next (“France”)
folder. In the “France“ folder, the starting number will automatically be 26, to
re-start numbering at 1 in the new directory simply change the number to 1. If a le
of the same name/number/conguration already exists, the following warning will
be displayed:
“Trailing index after base le name” is available to increase or decrease the
numbering sequence. “Digits 3” = image 001-999, “Digits 2” = image 01-99, and
“Digits 4” = image 0001-9999.
“File format” can be TIFF or JPG.
TIFF is an uncompressed, very large le format for high quality. JPG uses photo
quality JPEG compression which reduces the amount of data at the expense of
image quality. JPG can be saved in 3 sizes: “Good“ - small le size (ex.: for websites),
“Better“ - medium size quality (ex.: small photos for a family album), and “Best“ -
large les with least amount of compression applied.