That's a relative statement, some museums are ditching their Cruse scanners and going back to their BetterLight setups. All sorts of issues with color, softness, etc. Of course here we're discussing commercial situations, not museums, but the point remains--they aren't an "industry killer" like they were so wildly exclaimed. The less flat the object is the more problems they have--I'd still love to play with one though. Fantastic for large documents and flatter canvases--does anyone know if they output proper RAW files yet?
Saving it as a tiff won't improve it but it will sustain it. JPEG is a lossy format so if you keep working on a file and keep re-saving it as a jpeg it will degrade. If you work on a tiff and maybe save a copy to reduce file size and print from you probably won't notice the difference.
A tiff is gratuitously enormous
bob is wrong. lzw flattened tifs are not GRATUITOUSLY large. that was a definate mis step on his part.
but i catch your drift. so much so as to question what is large now? where is the benchmark anymore?
True. My concept of large probably differs somewhat from the popular notion of large. Understand that the first computer I ever worked with, back when your parents were still making in their pants, had a massive 4K of memory. Hand-strung core memory.
We doubled if to 8k and figured we could run through it barefoot. That being the case, talking to me about large is much like talking to a child of the great depression about unpleasant times.
Regardless, I still maintain that you, or anyone else, couldn't tell the difference unaided between a print from a tiff and a print from a properly constructed jpg. I find tiff's to be excessively anal.
...if its any constellation, i ran a one line BBS out of my bedroom on my atari 520stfm when i was 12. ive been around. ascii art bro. ascii art.
http://www.atarimuseum.com/computers/16bits/stmenu/atarist.htm
@massivegraphics
big question...! just saw this video of a 9900. how on earth does this printer have a straight paper path with the data/link lines crossing in front of the platen? does the paper's "straight" path run vertically or at an angle?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K054Jl-Pdho