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Date: | Mon, 12 Feb 1996 08:02:16 +1100 |
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Dominique
As we have discovered, imaging is a real can of worms with a number of
difficult tradeoffs/decisions to be made regarding resolution, processing
speed, storage, retrieval etc.
While I have no specific comments on the brands of equipment you are
looking at, I strongly advise checking the processing times on any
scanner you propose using as there are very significant differences which
can make huge differences to productivity over a period (I assume you
have already made your decisions on resolution capture quality).
Re CD-ROM machines- again the write speed for a CD-ROM varies enormously
from a couple of hours down to 10 minutes or so and there are various
other considerations like the need for a dedicated pc with a large hard
disk and lots of memory etc.
In view of the cost of consumables and capacity of the media, we are not
currently using CD-ROM but have decided to use DAT drives instead.
The drives are much cheaper (as are the tapes) and the capacity is triple
that of a CD-ROM.
There's no easy answer though depending on retrieval and archival life of
media etc, etc, etc........!
Good luck!
On Sat, 10 Feb 1996, Dominique Rogers wrote:
> I work as a volunteer in a museum which is planning to store
> images of the collection on CD ROM...................
Tim
**********************************************************************
* Tim Bosher * Museum of Victoria *
* [log in to unmask] * Information Systems Branch *
* Phone: +61 3 651 6751 * Fax: +61 3 651 6180 *
* *
* There is no time like the present to postpone *
* what you should be doing. *
* *
**********************************************************************
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