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ClearClick QuickConvert 2.0 Escáner de fotos, diapositivas y negativas - Escanear fotos de 4 x 6 y 35 mm, 110, 126 películas, no requiere computadora, 22 megapíxeles

Envío gratis en pedidos superiores a Mex $600.00

Mex $4,910.21

Mex $ 1,881 .00 Mex $1,881.00

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Acerca de este artículo

  • Escanea fácil y rápidamente tus fotos antiguas, diapositivas y negativos a fotos digitales (1 a la vez; el escáner no tiene autoalimentador) - Conversión súper rápida, toma solo 2-3 segundos para escanear una foto, diapositiva o negativo a digital (fotos 4x6 o menor; presiona el botón de tamaño para ajustar el tamaño de escaneo)
  • No requiere computadora ni controladores. Solo tienes que encenderlo y comenzar a escanear. Escanea a 14 megapíxeles (22 megapíxeles interpolados) y guarda fotos como archivos JPEG digitales en una tarjeta de memoria SD (calidad de escaneo: ~ 3824 x 2512 píxeles)
  • Batería recargable integrada para escanear sin cable (por favor, cargue completamente antes de usar) y visualización LCD de vista previa instantánea de 5 pulgadas
  • Escanea fotos sin tener que eliminarlas de álbumes de fotos o montajes **NOTA: no es compatible con fotos de 5 x 7 **
  • Garantía de 2 años y soporte técnico de ClearClick, una pequeña empresa de Estados Unidos



Descripción del producto

¿Tienes pilas de álbumes de fotos familiares o cajas de diapositivas viejas y negativos? Escanea tus fotos en formato digital para conservarlas y compartirlas con otros!

Con ClearClick QuickConvert 2.0, es más fácil que nunca convertir tus fotos en imágenes digitales. QuickConvert 2.0 no requiere un equipo para escanear, lo que significa que es rápido de configurar y fácil de usar. Además, la batería recargable del escáner lo hace extremadamente portátil y sin cables para escanear. Puede tener el escáner configurado y listo para comenzar a digitalizar sus fotos, diapositivas y negativos en cuestión de minutos.

A diferencia de la mayoría de los escáneres convencionales, QuickConvert 2.0 escanea desde arriba, lo que le permite escanear cada foto sin sacarla de su soporte o álbum de fotos. Alternativamente, puede cargar una foto en la bandeja de fotos del escáner para escanearla. El escáner funciona con fotos que son 4x6 o más pequeñas (5x7 no compatibles), así como diapositivas y negativos de 35 mm y 110/126 negativos.

La pantalla de 2,4 pulgadas de QuickConverter le permite obtener una vista previa de cada foto antes de escanearla. El escaneo es extremadamente rápido: simplemente cargue su foto, diapositiva o negativo, y pulse el botón "OK/SCAN". En tan solo 2-3 segundos, tu foto será escaneada y convertida a formato digital y guardada en la tarjeta de memoria incluida El escáner digitaliza tus fotos, diapositivas y negativos con una resolución de alta calidad de 14 megapíxeles.

Después de escanear las imágenes, puedes transferir las imágenes desde el escáner a tu PC o Mac utilizando el cable USB incluido. O bien, si su computadora tiene un lector de tarjetas, simplemente quite la tarjeta de memoria del escáner e insértela en el lector de tarjetas de su ordenador.

Especificaciones del producto (por favor, lee cuidadosamente antes de comprar)

- Tamaño total del escáner: 8 x 7 x 6 pulgadas

- Tamaño de la pantalla LCD: 6 cm (medida en diagonal)

- Resolución de escaneo: 14 megapíxeles

- Dimensiones de la imagen escaneada: Aproximadamente 3824 x 2512 píxeles

- Formato de imagen escaneada: Fotos digitales JPEG (Tamaño de archivo: ~3 MB)

- Tamaños de fotos compatibles: Fotos de 4 x 6 o más pequeñas (no escaneará fotos de 5 x 7): para escanear fotos, configure los interruptores frontales en modo Foto

- Tamaños de diapositivas 135/35mm - Para escanear diapositivas, configure los interruptores frontales en modo Película y pulse el botón "Tipo" para elegir el ajuste correcto

- Tamaños negativos compatibles: 135/35 mm, 126, 110 - Para escanear negativos, configure los interruptores frontales en modo Película y pulse el botón "Tipo" para elegir el ajuste correcto

- Nota sobre el puerto de alimentación USB: el cable micro USB solo se puede conectar al escáner en una dirección. Comprueba cuidadosamente la dirección antes de conectarlo. De lo contrario, el puerto USB puede dañarse si el cable está forzado.

Incluye tarjeta de memoria de 32 GB y software de edición de fotos

Incluye: Tarjeta de memoria de 8 GB y software de edición de imágenes PhotoPad Pro

El ClearClick QuickConvert viene con una tarjeta de memoria de 32 GB (que puede contener 8.000 fotos o más). También se incluye el software de edición de imágenes PhotoPad Pro, que se puede utilizar para editar, retocar, cambiar el tamaño y recortar tus fotos, así como para hacer hermosos collages de tus fotos.

Contenido de la caja:

- Escáner de fotos, diapositivas y negativos ClearClick QuickConvert 2.0

- Soportes de diapositivas y negativos

- Cepillo de limpieza

- Cable USB y adaptador de corriente

- Tarjeta de memoria de 32 GB

- Batería recargable

- Tarjeta de licencia de software PhotoPad Professional Edition (descarga digital/licencia; CD de software no incluido)

- Manual del usuario con guía de inicio rápido fácil

Especificaciones del producto (por favor, lee cuidadosamente antes de comprar)

- Tamaño total del escáner: 8 x 7 x 6 pulgadas

- Tamaño de la pantalla LCD: 6 cm (medida en diagonal)

- Resolución de escaneo: 14 megapíxeles

- Dimensiones de la imagen escaneada: Aproximadamente 3824 x 2512 píxeles

- Formato de imagen escaneada: Fotos digitales JPEG (Tamaño de archivo: ~3 MB)

- Tamaños de fotos compatibles: Fotos de 4 x 6 o más pequeñas (no escaneará fotos de 5 x 7): para escanear fotos, configure los interruptores frontales en modo Foto

- Tamaños de diapositivas 135/35mm - Para escanear diapositivas, configure los interruptores frontales en modo Película y pulse el botón "Tipo" para elegir el ajuste correcto

- Tamaños negativos compatibles: 135/35 mm, 126, 110 - Para escanear negativos, configure los interruptores frontales en modo Película y pulse el botón "Tipo" para elegir el ajuste correcto

- Nota sobre el puerto de alimentación USB: el cable micro USB solo se puede conectar al escáner en una dirección. Comprueba cuidadosamente la dirección antes de conectarlo. De lo contrario, el puerto USB puede dañarse si el cable está forzado.


Frank R Sharp
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de diciembre de 2024
This product is easy to use and does exactly what it says it does - make electronic copies of your photos. Can scan in the base, or remove base and put copier directly over the photo. 4 x 6 is maximum size though. One of the great things that happened to me was the product support from the company. I could not find the SIM card. I inquired at the address in the booklet and received a response within a few hours. I looked all over for it but could not find it. The company Rep by the name of Tyler shipped me a replacement within 48 hours. I have never had such great service from a company. Four stars plus for this device and company behind it.
Frank R Sharp
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de diciembre de 2024
This product is easy to use and does exactly what it says it does - make electronic copies of your photos. Can scan in the base, or remove base and put copier directly over the photo. 4 x 6 is maximum size though. One of the great things that happened to me was the product support from the company. I could not find the SIM card. I inquired at the address in the booklet and received a response within a few hours. I looked all over for it but could not find it. The company Rep by the name of Tyler shipped me a replacement within 48 hours. I have never had such great service from a company. Four stars plus for this device and company behind it.
Frank R Sharp
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de diciembre de 2024
This product is easy to use and does exactly what it says it does - make electronic copies of your photos. Can scan in the base, or remove base and put copier directly over the photo. 4 x 6 is maximum size though. One of the great things that happened to me was the product support from the company. I could not find the SIM card. I inquired at the address in the booklet and received a response within a few hours. I looked all over for it but could not find it. The company Rep by the name of Tyler shipped me a replacement within 48 hours. I have never had such great service from a company. Four stars plus for this device and company behind it.
Frank R Sharp
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de diciembre de 2024
This product is easy to use and does exactly what it says it does - make electronic copies of your photos. Can scan in the base, or remove base and put copier directly over the photo. 4 x 6 is maximum size though. One of the great things that happened to me was the product support from the company. I could not find the SIM card. I inquired at the address in the booklet and received a response within a few hours. I looked all over for it but could not find it. The company Rep by the name of Tyler shipped me a replacement within 48 hours. I have never had such great service from a company. Four stars plus for this device and company behind it.
Frank R Sharp
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de diciembre de 2024
This product is easy to use and does exactly what it says it does - make electronic copies of your photos. Can scan in the base, or remove base and put copier directly over the photo. 4 x 6 is maximum size though. One of the great things that happened to me was the product support from the company. I could not find the SIM card. I inquired at the address in the booklet and received a response within a few hours. I looked all over for it but could not find it. The company Rep by the name of Tyler shipped me a replacement within 48 hours. I have never had such great service from a company. Four stars plus for this device and company behind it.
Frank R Sharp
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de diciembre de 2024
This product is easy to use and does exactly what it says it does - make electronic copies of your photos. Can scan in the base, or remove base and put copier directly over the photo. 4 x 6 is maximum size though. One of the great things that happened to me was the product support from the company. I could not find the SIM card. I inquired at the address in the booklet and received a response within a few hours. I looked all over for it but could not find it. The company Rep by the name of Tyler shipped me a replacement within 48 hours. I have never had such great service from a company. Four stars plus for this device and company behind it.
Frank R Sharp
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de diciembre de 2024
This product is easy to use and does exactly what it says it does - make electronic copies of your photos. Can scan in the base, or remove base and put copier directly over the photo. 4 x 6 is maximum size though. One of the great things that happened to me was the product support from the company. I could not find the SIM card. I inquired at the address in the booklet and received a response within a few hours. I looked all over for it but could not find it. The company Rep by the name of Tyler shipped me a replacement within 48 hours. I have never had such great service from a company. Four stars plus for this device and company behind it.
Frank R Sharp
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de diciembre de 2024
This product is easy to use and does exactly what it says it does - make electronic copies of your photos. Can scan in the base, or remove base and put copier directly over the photo. 4 x 6 is maximum size though. One of the great things that happened to me was the product support from the company. I could not find the SIM card. I inquired at the address in the booklet and received a response within a few hours. I looked all over for it but could not find it. The company Rep by the name of Tyler shipped me a replacement within 48 hours. I have never had such great service from a company. Four stars plus for this device and company behind it.
mll
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 6 de enero de 2024
This ClearClick image scanner was purchased (initially) for the creation of the ultimate Christmas gift. Family members *truly* enjoy having their decades-old slides & photos available in electronic format.It is relatively labor intensive to work through any project of this type, but where there is a will, there is a way. No doubt, the ClearClick streamlined the entire process and produced amazing results. Where professional digitizing services charge (on average) ~$1/slide or photo, this unit will far exceed its price tag value when you have hundreds to thousands of photographic memories. If you can allocate the time doing the work, yourself, then just do it.Couple of notes:- if scanning slides, use canned-air to remove dust particles prior to each scan. It's well worth the effort, you don't want to have to redo anything. I went through 2 cans, cleaning ~900 slides. I eventually picked up an electric handheld, dust-blower/remover since canned-air can be pricey. At present, I still have a over a few thousand slides yet to scan.- If scanning boxes of slides, carousels of slides, or envelopes of photos:-- Just a suggestion: do one entire box/envelope/slide-carousel at a time. I moved them after each completed batch to a computer.-- I named them using the slide/photo film development date and slide/photo number (when available), using a naming scheme of '___.jpg, so '1971_08__15.jpg' as an example. Where there was more than one box with same developing dates, I suffixed the month with a letter, ex: '1971_08b__15.jpg' which was slide 15 from the second box. Moving the image files off from the scanner card (using USB mode on the ClearClick) and renaming the jpeg files right away eliminated any potential for confusion of what had already been scanned.- Scanning one slide/photo does take ~1-2 seconds, as indicated.- Scanning photos while they're still in the plastic of an album 'works' but the rows of scanner LEDs could sometimes be seen on the top and bottom of the finished scan. Removing them from the plastic, while it adds more time, is well-worth the effort. You only want to "have to" scan your photos one time, in my opinion.- The ClearClick on-screen menu took a little bit to get used to, but it's relatively intuitive. I only used the brightness and RGB color adjustments a small handful of times. Keep in mind that each of those color adjustment settings remains 'set' until the unit's power is cycled or if you go back in to reset them.- I haven't tried the HDMI 'preview via a TV' feature, but that is certainly a bonus. The screen on the unit worked for my needs.- The included 32GB SD card was more than enough. Image files were, on average, 3-4MB in size using the 22MP setting. The ~900 jpeg files were ~3GB, in total.
mll
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 6 de enero de 2024
This ClearClick image scanner was purchased (initially) for the creation of the ultimate Christmas gift. Family members *truly* enjoy having their decades-old slides & photos available in electronic format.It is relatively labor intensive to work through any project of this type, but where there is a will, there is a way. No doubt, the ClearClick streamlined the entire process and produced amazing results. Where professional digitizing services charge (on average) ~$1/slide or photo, this unit will far exceed its price tag value when you have hundreds to thousands of photographic memories. If you can allocate the time doing the work, yourself, then just do it.Couple of notes:- if scanning slides, use canned-air to remove dust particles prior to each scan. It's well worth the effort, you don't want to have to redo anything. I went through 2 cans, cleaning ~900 slides. I eventually picked up an electric handheld, dust-blower/remover since canned-air can be pricey. At present, I still have a over a few thousand slides yet to scan.- If scanning boxes of slides, carousels of slides, or envelopes of photos:-- Just a suggestion: do one entire box/envelope/slide-carousel at a time. I moved them after each completed batch to a computer.-- I named them using the slide/photo film development date and slide/photo number (when available), using a naming scheme of '___.jpg, so '1971_08__15.jpg' as an example. Where there was more than one box with same developing dates, I suffixed the month with a letter, ex: '1971_08b__15.jpg' which was slide 15 from the second box. Moving the image files off from the scanner card (using USB mode on the ClearClick) and renaming the jpeg files right away eliminated any potential for confusion of what had already been scanned.- Scanning one slide/photo does take ~1-2 seconds, as indicated.- Scanning photos while they're still in the plastic of an album 'works' but the rows of scanner LEDs could sometimes be seen on the top and bottom of the finished scan. Removing them from the plastic, while it adds more time, is well-worth the effort. You only want to "have to" scan your photos one time, in my opinion.- The ClearClick on-screen menu took a little bit to get used to, but it's relatively intuitive. I only used the brightness and RGB color adjustments a small handful of times. Keep in mind that each of those color adjustment settings remains 'set' until the unit's power is cycled or if you go back in to reset them.- I haven't tried the HDMI 'preview via a TV' feature, but that is certainly a bonus. The screen on the unit worked for my needs.- The included 32GB SD card was more than enough. Image files were, on average, 3-4MB in size using the 22MP setting. The ~900 jpeg files were ~3GB, in total.
mll
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 6 de enero de 2024
This ClearClick image scanner was purchased (initially) for the creation of the ultimate Christmas gift. Family members *truly* enjoy having their decades-old slides & photos available in electronic format.It is relatively labor intensive to work through any project of this type, but where there is a will, there is a way. No doubt, the ClearClick streamlined the entire process and produced amazing results. Where professional digitizing services charge (on average) ~$1/slide or photo, this unit will far exceed its price tag value when you have hundreds to thousands of photographic memories. If you can allocate the time doing the work, yourself, then just do it.Couple of notes:- if scanning slides, use canned-air to remove dust particles prior to each scan. It's well worth the effort, you don't want to have to redo anything. I went through 2 cans, cleaning ~900 slides. I eventually picked up an electric handheld, dust-blower/remover since canned-air can be pricey. At present, I still have a over a few thousand slides yet to scan.- If scanning boxes of slides, carousels of slides, or envelopes of photos:-- Just a suggestion: do one entire box/envelope/slide-carousel at a time. I moved them after each completed batch to a computer.-- I named them using the slide/photo film development date and slide/photo number (when available), using a naming scheme of '___.jpg, so '1971_08__15.jpg' as an example. Where there was more than one box with same developing dates, I suffixed the month with a letter, ex: '1971_08b__15.jpg' which was slide 15 from the second box. Moving the image files off from the scanner card (using USB mode on the ClearClick) and renaming the jpeg files right away eliminated any potential for confusion of what had already been scanned.- Scanning one slide/photo does take ~1-2 seconds, as indicated.- Scanning photos while they're still in the plastic of an album 'works' but the rows of scanner LEDs could sometimes be seen on the top and bottom of the finished scan. Removing them from the plastic, while it adds more time, is well-worth the effort. You only want to "have to" scan your photos one time, in my opinion.- The ClearClick on-screen menu took a little bit to get used to, but it's relatively intuitive. I only used the brightness and RGB color adjustments a small handful of times. Keep in mind that each of those color adjustment settings remains 'set' until the unit's power is cycled or if you go back in to reset them.- I haven't tried the HDMI 'preview via a TV' feature, but that is certainly a bonus. The screen on the unit worked for my needs.- The included 32GB SD card was more than enough. Image files were, on average, 3-4MB in size using the 22MP setting. The ~900 jpeg files were ~3GB, in total.
mll
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 6 de enero de 2024
This ClearClick image scanner was purchased (initially) for the creation of the ultimate Christmas gift. Family members *truly* enjoy having their decades-old slides & photos available in electronic format.It is relatively labor intensive to work through any project of this type, but where there is a will, there is a way. No doubt, the ClearClick streamlined the entire process and produced amazing results. Where professional digitizing services charge (on average) ~$1/slide or photo, this unit will far exceed its price tag value when you have hundreds to thousands of photographic memories. If you can allocate the time doing the work, yourself, then just do it.Couple of notes:- if scanning slides, use canned-air to remove dust particles prior to each scan. It's well worth the effort, you don't want to have to redo anything. I went through 2 cans, cleaning ~900 slides. I eventually picked up an electric handheld, dust-blower/remover since canned-air can be pricey. At present, I still have a over a few thousand slides yet to scan.- If scanning boxes of slides, carousels of slides, or envelopes of photos:-- Just a suggestion: do one entire box/envelope/slide-carousel at a time. I moved them after each completed batch to a computer.-- I named them using the slide/photo film development date and slide/photo number (when available), using a naming scheme of '___.jpg, so '1971_08__15.jpg' as an example. Where there was more than one box with same developing dates, I suffixed the month with a letter, ex: '1971_08b__15.jpg' which was slide 15 from the second box. Moving the image files off from the scanner card (using USB mode on the ClearClick) and renaming the jpeg files right away eliminated any potential for confusion of what had already been scanned.- Scanning one slide/photo does take ~1-2 seconds, as indicated.- Scanning photos while they're still in the plastic of an album 'works' but the rows of scanner LEDs could sometimes be seen on the top and bottom of the finished scan. Removing them from the plastic, while it adds more time, is well-worth the effort. You only want to "have to" scan your photos one time, in my opinion.- The ClearClick on-screen menu took a little bit to get used to, but it's relatively intuitive. I only used the brightness and RGB color adjustments a small handful of times. Keep in mind that each of those color adjustment settings remains 'set' until the unit's power is cycled or if you go back in to reset them.- I haven't tried the HDMI 'preview via a TV' feature, but that is certainly a bonus. The screen on the unit worked for my needs.- The included 32GB SD card was more than enough. Image files were, on average, 3-4MB in size using the 22MP setting. The ~900 jpeg files were ~3GB, in total.
mll
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 6 de enero de 2024
This ClearClick image scanner was purchased (initially) for the creation of the ultimate Christmas gift. Family members *truly* enjoy having their decades-old slides & photos available in electronic format.It is relatively labor intensive to work through any project of this type, but where there is a will, there is a way. No doubt, the ClearClick streamlined the entire process and produced amazing results. Where professional digitizing services charge (on average) ~$1/slide or photo, this unit will far exceed its price tag value when you have hundreds to thousands of photographic memories. If you can allocate the time doing the work, yourself, then just do it.Couple of notes:- if scanning slides, use canned-air to remove dust particles prior to each scan. It's well worth the effort, you don't want to have to redo anything. I went through 2 cans, cleaning ~900 slides. I eventually picked up an electric handheld, dust-blower/remover since canned-air can be pricey. At present, I still have a over a few thousand slides yet to scan.- If scanning boxes of slides, carousels of slides, or envelopes of photos:-- Just a suggestion: do one entire box/envelope/slide-carousel at a time. I moved them after each completed batch to a computer.-- I named them using the slide/photo film development date and slide/photo number (when available), using a naming scheme of '___.jpg, so '1971_08__15.jpg' as an example. Where there was more than one box with same developing dates, I suffixed the month with a letter, ex: '1971_08b__15.jpg' which was slide 15 from the second box. Moving the image files off from the scanner card (using USB mode on the ClearClick) and renaming the jpeg files right away eliminated any potential for confusion of what had already been scanned.- Scanning one slide/photo does take ~1-2 seconds, as indicated.- Scanning photos while they're still in the plastic of an album 'works' but the rows of scanner LEDs could sometimes be seen on the top and bottom of the finished scan. Removing them from the plastic, while it adds more time, is well-worth the effort. You only want to "have to" scan your photos one time, in my opinion.- The ClearClick on-screen menu took a little bit to get used to, but it's relatively intuitive. I only used the brightness and RGB color adjustments a small handful of times. Keep in mind that each of those color adjustment settings remains 'set' until the unit's power is cycled or if you go back in to reset them.- I haven't tried the HDMI 'preview via a TV' feature, but that is certainly a bonus. The screen on the unit worked for my needs.- The included 32GB SD card was more than enough. Image files were, on average, 3-4MB in size using the 22MP setting. The ~900 jpeg files were ~3GB, in total.
mll
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 6 de enero de 2024
This ClearClick image scanner was purchased (initially) for the creation of the ultimate Christmas gift. Family members *truly* enjoy having their decades-old slides & photos available in electronic format.It is relatively labor intensive to work through any project of this type, but where there is a will, there is a way. No doubt, the ClearClick streamlined the entire process and produced amazing results. Where professional digitizing services charge (on average) ~$1/slide or photo, this unit will far exceed its price tag value when you have hundreds to thousands of photographic memories. If you can allocate the time doing the work, yourself, then just do it.Couple of notes:- if scanning slides, use canned-air to remove dust particles prior to each scan. It's well worth the effort, you don't want to have to redo anything. I went through 2 cans, cleaning ~900 slides. I eventually picked up an electric handheld, dust-blower/remover since canned-air can be pricey. At present, I still have a over a few thousand slides yet to scan.- If scanning boxes of slides, carousels of slides, or envelopes of photos:-- Just a suggestion: do one entire box/envelope/slide-carousel at a time. I moved them after each completed batch to a computer.-- I named them using the slide/photo film development date and slide/photo number (when available), using a naming scheme of '___.jpg, so '1971_08__15.jpg' as an example. Where there was more than one box with same developing dates, I suffixed the month with a letter, ex: '1971_08b__15.jpg' which was slide 15 from the second box. Moving the image files off from the scanner card (using USB mode on the ClearClick) and renaming the jpeg files right away eliminated any potential for confusion of what had already been scanned.- Scanning one slide/photo does take ~1-2 seconds, as indicated.- Scanning photos while they're still in the plastic of an album 'works' but the rows of scanner LEDs could sometimes be seen on the top and bottom of the finished scan. Removing them from the plastic, while it adds more time, is well-worth the effort. You only want to "have to" scan your photos one time, in my opinion.- The ClearClick on-screen menu took a little bit to get used to, but it's relatively intuitive. I only used the brightness and RGB color adjustments a small handful of times. Keep in mind that each of those color adjustment settings remains 'set' until the unit's power is cycled or if you go back in to reset them.- I haven't tried the HDMI 'preview via a TV' feature, but that is certainly a bonus. The screen on the unit worked for my needs.- The included 32GB SD card was more than enough. Image files were, on average, 3-4MB in size using the 22MP setting. The ~900 jpeg files were ~3GB, in total.
mll
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 6 de enero de 2024
This ClearClick image scanner was purchased (initially) for the creation of the ultimate Christmas gift. Family members *truly* enjoy having their decades-old slides & photos available in electronic format.It is relatively labor intensive to work through any project of this type, but where there is a will, there is a way. No doubt, the ClearClick streamlined the entire process and produced amazing results. Where professional digitizing services charge (on average) ~$1/slide or photo, this unit will far exceed its price tag value when you have hundreds to thousands of photographic memories. If you can allocate the time doing the work, yourself, then just do it.Couple of notes:- if scanning slides, use canned-air to remove dust particles prior to each scan. It's well worth the effort, you don't want to have to redo anything. I went through 2 cans, cleaning ~900 slides. I eventually picked up an electric handheld, dust-blower/remover since canned-air can be pricey. At present, I still have a over a few thousand slides yet to scan.- If scanning boxes of slides, carousels of slides, or envelopes of photos:-- Just a suggestion: do one entire box/envelope/slide-carousel at a time. I moved them after each completed batch to a computer.-- I named them using the slide/photo film development date and slide/photo number (when available), using a naming scheme of '___.jpg, so '1971_08__15.jpg' as an example. Where there was more than one box with same developing dates, I suffixed the month with a letter, ex: '1971_08b__15.jpg' which was slide 15 from the second box. Moving the image files off from the scanner card (using USB mode on the ClearClick) and renaming the jpeg files right away eliminated any potential for confusion of what had already been scanned.- Scanning one slide/photo does take ~1-2 seconds, as indicated.- Scanning photos while they're still in the plastic of an album 'works' but the rows of scanner LEDs could sometimes be seen on the top and bottom of the finished scan. Removing them from the plastic, while it adds more time, is well-worth the effort. You only want to "have to" scan your photos one time, in my opinion.- The ClearClick on-screen menu took a little bit to get used to, but it's relatively intuitive. I only used the brightness and RGB color adjustments a small handful of times. Keep in mind that each of those color adjustment settings remains 'set' until the unit's power is cycled or if you go back in to reset them.- I haven't tried the HDMI 'preview via a TV' feature, but that is certainly a bonus. The screen on the unit worked for my needs.- The included 32GB SD card was more than enough. Image files were, on average, 3-4MB in size using the 22MP setting. The ~900 jpeg files were ~3GB, in total.
mll
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 6 de enero de 2024
This ClearClick image scanner was purchased (initially) for the creation of the ultimate Christmas gift. Family members *truly* enjoy having their decades-old slides & photos available in electronic format.It is relatively labor intensive to work through any project of this type, but where there is a will, there is a way. No doubt, the ClearClick streamlined the entire process and produced amazing results. Where professional digitizing services charge (on average) ~$1/slide or photo, this unit will far exceed its price tag value when you have hundreds to thousands of photographic memories. If you can allocate the time doing the work, yourself, then just do it.Couple of notes:- if scanning slides, use canned-air to remove dust particles prior to each scan. It's well worth the effort, you don't want to have to redo anything. I went through 2 cans, cleaning ~900 slides. I eventually picked up an electric handheld, dust-blower/remover since canned-air can be pricey. At present, I still have a over a few thousand slides yet to scan.- If scanning boxes of slides, carousels of slides, or envelopes of photos:-- Just a suggestion: do one entire box/envelope/slide-carousel at a time. I moved them after each completed batch to a computer.-- I named them using the slide/photo film development date and slide/photo number (when available), using a naming scheme of '___.jpg, so '1971_08__15.jpg' as an example. Where there was more than one box with same developing dates, I suffixed the month with a letter, ex: '1971_08b__15.jpg' which was slide 15 from the second box. Moving the image files off from the scanner card (using USB mode on the ClearClick) and renaming the jpeg files right away eliminated any potential for confusion of what had already been scanned.- Scanning one slide/photo does take ~1-2 seconds, as indicated.- Scanning photos while they're still in the plastic of an album 'works' but the rows of scanner LEDs could sometimes be seen on the top and bottom of the finished scan. Removing them from the plastic, while it adds more time, is well-worth the effort. You only want to "have to" scan your photos one time, in my opinion.- The ClearClick on-screen menu took a little bit to get used to, but it's relatively intuitive. I only used the brightness and RGB color adjustments a small handful of times. Keep in mind that each of those color adjustment settings remains 'set' until the unit's power is cycled or if you go back in to reset them.- I haven't tried the HDMI 'preview via a TV' feature, but that is certainly a bonus. The screen on the unit worked for my needs.- The included 32GB SD card was more than enough. Image files were, on average, 3-4MB in size using the 22MP setting. The ~900 jpeg files were ~3GB, in total.
María
Comentado en México el 7 de octubre de 2022
Para tomar las imágenes de un álbum es complicado y con se obtiene una resolución buena, no lo recomendaría
María
Comentado en México el 7 de octubre de 2022
Para tomar las imágenes de un álbum es complicado y con se obtiene una resolución buena, no lo recomendaría
María
Comentado en México el 7 de octubre de 2022
Para tomar las imágenes de un álbum es complicado y con se obtiene una resolución buena, no lo recomendaría
María
Comentado en México el 7 de octubre de 2022
Para tomar las imágenes de un álbum es complicado y con se obtiene una resolución buena, no lo recomendaría
María
Comentado en México el 7 de octubre de 2022
Para tomar las imágenes de un álbum es complicado y con se obtiene una resolución buena, no lo recomendaría
María
Comentado en México el 7 de octubre de 2022
Para tomar las imágenes de un álbum es complicado y con se obtiene una resolución buena, no lo recomendaría
María
Comentado en México el 7 de octubre de 2022
Para tomar las imágenes de un álbum es complicado y con se obtiene una resolución buena, no lo recomendaría
María
Comentado en México el 7 de octubre de 2022
Para tomar las imágenes de un álbum es complicado y con se obtiene una resolución buena, no lo recomendaría
Corinne O'Neill
Comentado en Canadá el 7 de junio de 2020
It was working just fine. I got 3 reels done. Then I plugged into my laptop and it wouldn’t work as the USB connection fell inside the unit..there was no way to open it..I contacted the company though and they are sending me another unit.
Corinne O'Neill
Comentado en Canadá el 7 de junio de 2020
It was working just fine. I got 3 reels done. Then I plugged into my laptop and it wouldn’t work as the USB connection fell inside the unit..there was no way to open it..I contacted the company though and they are sending me another unit.
Corinne O'Neill
Comentado en Canadá el 7 de junio de 2020
It was working just fine. I got 3 reels done. Then I plugged into my laptop and it wouldn’t work as the USB connection fell inside the unit..there was no way to open it..I contacted the company though and they are sending me another unit.
Corinne O'Neill
Comentado en Canadá el 7 de junio de 2020
It was working just fine. I got 3 reels done. Then I plugged into my laptop and it wouldn’t work as the USB connection fell inside the unit..there was no way to open it..I contacted the company though and they are sending me another unit.
Corinne O'Neill
Comentado en Canadá el 7 de junio de 2020
It was working just fine. I got 3 reels done. Then I plugged into my laptop and it wouldn’t work as the USB connection fell inside the unit..there was no way to open it..I contacted the company though and they are sending me another unit.
Corinne O'Neill
Comentado en Canadá el 7 de junio de 2020
It was working just fine. I got 3 reels done. Then I plugged into my laptop and it wouldn’t work as the USB connection fell inside the unit..there was no way to open it..I contacted the company though and they are sending me another unit.
Corinne O'Neill
Comentado en Canadá el 7 de junio de 2020
It was working just fine. I got 3 reels done. Then I plugged into my laptop and it wouldn’t work as the USB connection fell inside the unit..there was no way to open it..I contacted the company though and they are sending me another unit.
Corinne O'Neill
Comentado en Canadá el 7 de junio de 2020
It was working just fine. I got 3 reels done. Then I plugged into my laptop and it wouldn’t work as the USB connection fell inside the unit..there was no way to open it..I contacted the company though and they are sending me another unit.
Deanna Chelak
Comentado en Canadá el 29 de abril de 2020
Exactly as described. Have just started using...I have old odd shaped negatives (from the mid 1950s) so they didn’t fit exactly, but I trimmed the edges and it works perfect! So excited to see the pictures.
Deanna Chelak
Comentado en Canadá el 29 de abril de 2020
Exactly as described. Have just started using...I have old odd shaped negatives (from the mid 1950s) so they didn’t fit exactly, but I trimmed the edges and it works perfect! So excited to see the pictures.
Deanna Chelak
Comentado en Canadá el 29 de abril de 2020
Exactly as described. Have just started using...I have old odd shaped negatives (from the mid 1950s) so they didn’t fit exactly, but I trimmed the edges and it works perfect! So excited to see the pictures.
Deanna Chelak
Comentado en Canadá el 29 de abril de 2020
Exactly as described. Have just started using...I have old odd shaped negatives (from the mid 1950s) so they didn’t fit exactly, but I trimmed the edges and it works perfect! So excited to see the pictures.
Deanna Chelak
Comentado en Canadá el 29 de abril de 2020
Exactly as described. Have just started using...I have old odd shaped negatives (from the mid 1950s) so they didn’t fit exactly, but I trimmed the edges and it works perfect! So excited to see the pictures.
Deanna Chelak
Comentado en Canadá el 29 de abril de 2020
Exactly as described. Have just started using...I have old odd shaped negatives (from the mid 1950s) so they didn’t fit exactly, but I trimmed the edges and it works perfect! So excited to see the pictures.
Deanna Chelak
Comentado en Canadá el 29 de abril de 2020
Exactly as described. Have just started using...I have old odd shaped negatives (from the mid 1950s) so they didn’t fit exactly, but I trimmed the edges and it works perfect! So excited to see the pictures.
Deanna Chelak
Comentado en Canadá el 29 de abril de 2020
Exactly as described. Have just started using...I have old odd shaped negatives (from the mid 1950s) so they didn’t fit exactly, but I trimmed the edges and it works perfect! So excited to see the pictures.
Abdul razzaq junejo
crisp pictures
Abdul razzaq junejo
crisp pictures
Abdul razzaq junejo
crisp pictures
Abdul razzaq junejo
crisp pictures
Abdul razzaq junejo
crisp pictures
Abdul razzaq junejo
crisp pictures
Abdul razzaq junejo
crisp pictures
Abdul razzaq junejo
crisp pictures
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