Digital Help
Q&A For Digital Photography
Digital Help is designed to aid you in getting the most from your digital photography,
printing, scanning, and image creation. Each month, David Brooks provides solutions
to problems you might encounter with matters such as color calibration and management,
digital printer and scanner settings, and working with digital photographic
images with many different kinds of cameras and software. All questions sent
to him will be answered with the most appropriate information he can access
and provide. However, not all questions and answers will appear in this department.
Readers can send questions to David Brooks addressed to Shutterbug magazine,
through the Shutterbug website (www.shutterbug.com), directly via e-mail to:
editorial@shutterbug.com
or fotografx@mindspring.com
or by US Mail to: David Brooks, PO Box 2830, Lompoc, CA 93438.
Don't Buy "Fast" Digital Camera Storage Cards If You
Don't Need The Speed
Q. I was under the impression there was a need for a faster card to cut down
on the lag time between shots, whether it was for fast action or not. I do not
use it for burst or action sports shooting except for my kids' soccer
or baseball games but how fast can a 6- or 9-year-old be? My concern: I am trying
to use this D-SLR like my Minolta 9xi, and in regards to shutter lag, I see
people all the time with digital point-and-shoot cameras and they have to wait
for what seems like 3 or 4 seconds before they can shoot again. I have never
owned a digital camera and I am very excited to get my Sony A100 D-SLR, and
I am only trying to stay ahead of any shutter lag problems.
Peter
A. Many point-and-shoot cameras are produced to a low price point and
therefore the manufacturer does not install a sizable RAM buffer to store exposures
in a queue for downloading to the memory card. Most D-SLRs do have a RAM buffer
that will hold several exposures; the higher up the "professional"
ladder and price of a D-SLR, the larger the buffer size, usually. (Editor's
Note: Re: shutter lag. This has more to do with the mechanics of point-and-shoots
vs. D-SLRs, and you should find any shutter lag virtually disappears when switching
to a D-SLR.)
Apple Mac mini Spurs Interest As A Computer For Digital Photography
Q. I want to thank you for your review of the Mac mini in the November 2006
issue. As a PC user I have been looking to make the switch to Mac for some time
now. I am interested if you have any issues with running Aperture 1.5 or CS2
on the mini. I am concerned that the graphic card is 64MB shared. I plan to
use it for photo imaging, retouching, and likely will also run Lightroom for
Mac. I have considered the iMac, but if I do not need the 128 or 256 graphic
card I would be pleased with the Mac mini. If you are satisfied with the Mac
mini I am certain that I would also be pleased with it. I do plan to run the
mini with 2GB RAM.
Wayne Summers
A. Since my report on the Mac mini, Apple has upgraded the Mac mini
and the Intel Core Solo model I reported on has been replaced with an Intel
Core Duo processor. The next model up now has a 1.83MHz Core Duo processor and
the base price remains the same. Inasmuch as my experience with the Mac mini
Solo was very favorable, I recently purchased another, the 1.83MHz Core Duo
version, and now use the original Solo as my business computer. The graphic
performance of the original Solo, running a 21" CRT at 1152x870 resolution,
was perfectly satisfactory, but when I used it with the 1600x1200 resolution
LCD it did slow screen re-writes a bit. But the new 1.83 is faster and the display
performance with an LCD at 1600x1200 leaves nothing to be desired. In fact,
this 1.83MHz Mac mini is barely slower in any performance aspect than a 2-3-year-old
Power Mac Dual Processor G5 with an ATI 9600Pro video card that costs 2.5x as
much.
However, I would not recommend a Mac mini for doing photography with anything
less than 2GB of RAM, but you say that's what you plan. I would also suggest
that the extra $200 for the 1.83MHz model with SuperDrive is worthwhile, and
with a new Apple keyboard and Super Mouse it all totals $1077, which even with
the added cost of an LCD display is very modest for the excellent performance
it provides.
More Choices In High-Performance Pigment-Ink Printers
Q. First, thank you for your response to my recent inquiry regarding scanners.
Following your advice I now have an Epson V700, which I have been getting acquainted
with the last few weeks and could not be happier with the results.
Now I feel I need a new printer. I want to upgrade to a 13" unit and have
been reading about the Epson Stylus Photo R2400, the HP Photosmart Pro B9180,
and the Canon PIXMA Pro9000 and Pro9500. Your 2005 report on the R2400 has pretty
well convinced me that this is a great choice, especially since I will be printing
black and white 30 percent of the time. The report is over a year old now, and
I am wondering how the other mentioned competing units now compare (I realize
the PIXMA Pro9500 is not yet on the market and I'll probably not wait
for it to come out).
One issue regarding the R2400 that is a concern to me is the replacing of the
photo black with the matte black when printing black and white on matte paper.
Is there any flushing of the replaced ink with the new ink required or significant
loss of ink as a result of making this swap?
Jerry Hite
A. The new HP B9180 has been tested and a report by Jon Canfield was
printed in the November 2006 issue. The feedback I am getting is that it is
in some ways quite competitive, but is somewhat of a problem to custom profile
at this point.
I am currently using a Canon imagePROGRAF iPF5000, a 17" Canon pigment-ink
printer which I have tested; my report appeared in the March 2007 issue. It
has the same Canon Lucia inks as the PIXMA Pro9500 will use and similar technology.
The larger iPF5000 is another step ahead in pigment-ink inkjet printing, providing
better print results than what I obtain with my Epson R2400.
However, in 13" wide printers I think the Epson R2400 remains the best,
at least for the time being. And to answer your specific question, switching
between matte and photo black inks is very easy and does not require any flushing
or loss of ink (there is actually very little ink retained in the print head).
And, you can just put a piece of Scotch tape over the outlet of the removed
cartridge to keep air out and it will reinstall and work fine even after weeks,
if not longer. So, there is no ink loss.
Image File Management And Cataloging
Q. Years ago there was a program that was called Ixla. It had a cataloging feature
that was great. The company, I think, is no longer around, so maybe you can
help. First, let me describe the program: It had the same features as most do
that I've found today and a little more. It had an in-depth catalog feature
where the main folder was named, say People, then inside that folder were Men,
Women, and Children folders, etc. Then all you had to do was drag and drop or
copy your photo into that folder. It was great because it was already set up
with indexing and subject folders in place--just as if you went to the
library.
Now I know all current programs can do the same thing and even more in-depth
than the Ixla program, as long as you have the time to create each and every
folder along with all the subfolders. This program also let you convert a batch
of photos to, say TIFF, without losing the original. It also let you create
a small website, although it wasn't too elaborate.
Yes, I have Picasa, Ulead, Adobe Album, ArcSoft, and I'm still going through
them. There has to be some generic program that businesses and free-lancers
are using that will help save time. I have all the programs I need to edit photos
but none for cataloging. Was there a back issue that covered it? I may have
overlooked it because most of your issues only deal with editing programs.
Jeff
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