In today's digital age, 35mm film slides and the bulky projectors formerly used to view them are a thing of the past. Instead of boxing up your old slides and stuffing them in an attic to be forgotten ...
The North Orange County Computer Club helps The Gadgetress tackle the multitude of readers’ cries for help. NOCCC group has experts in Windows, Word and all sorts of computer topics. The club, which ...
Q. I am a regular reader of your column and have found it enlightening. However, I believe you may have misread the recent question you answered for reader Bill Reetz regarding burning 35 mm color ...
Today the digital camera is ubiquitous, but photos used to be taken by momentarily exposing something called “film” to light. Yes, film–the ode to photo-sensitive chemical reactions that produced all ...
I really don't want to shell out for a scanner then just have it laying around after I'm done scanning my old photographs. Also for the purest I would really need a good flatbed ($200 or so?) and a ...
Hot on the trail of this new film scanner, I’ve been watching HP’s promotional video on the company’s website. It majors on ‘turning family history into digital memories’ and there’s certainly nothing ...
Unless you were born after 1990, chances are good that you’ve got a shoebox (or seven) filled with photos, slides, and negatives from the good old days of film photography. You’d probably enjoy having ...
Q: In a recent column, there was a question about scanning slides and burning them onto disks. What kind of equipment do you need to do this? We had a lot of family pictures on slides taken from 1950 ...
From the days of poodle skirts until tie-dyed T-shirts were the rage, the shutterbugs of my family favored slides over photographs to capture weddings, vacations, reunions and even my dad's Army tour ...