@salad, @M_V, I guess the real win of this system is speed. It scans film very fast and they also offer their own software which looks a bit like Negative Lab Pro but it's stand-alone.
The software can watch folders for new files and can auto-crop and then convert based on templates you create. If you have a camera tethered to a laptop, taking a photo with a button press and then saving it straight to your PC, getting it auto-converted, then this would be an incredibly fast way to scan a roll. Potentially even multiple if the same settings are applicable. Like scanning two or three rolls of the same film stock from the same location.
@salad, @M_V, I guess the real win of this system is speed. It scans film very fast and they also offer their own software which looks a bit like Negative Lab Pro but it's stand-alone.
The software can watch folders for new files and can auto-crop and then convert based on templates you create. If you have a camera tethered to a laptop, taking a photo with a button press and then saving it straight to your PC, getting it auto-converted, then this would be an incredibly fast way to scan a roll. Potentially even multiple if the same settings are applicable. Like scanning two or three rolls of the same film stock from the same location.