
The Professional Edition, which is what I review here, offers free upgrades with no time limit, including upgrades of major revisions, like going from version 8 to the current version 9. However, you don't get any of the options that show up with the Advanced button, like the ability to adjust red, green, and blue brightness separately. For adjusting color, for example, you can set white point, black point, and brightness, and you can pick from a list of ten choices for color balance, including Neutral, Night, Tungsten, and Fluorescent. The Standard Edition ($29.95) offers free upgrades for one year and lacks what VueScan treats as advanced features. If you decide to buy VueScan, you have two choices. However, you can make sure the program works well with your scanner, and you can work with it as much as you like to get a feel for using it. The free version is fully functional, including all of the features in the Professional Edition, but it watermarks your scans, so you can't really use them for anything.

You can either download the program for free or purchase it. Hamrick Software offers VueScan strictly as a download from its website (Opens in a new window), which has a list of supported scanners.

(Opens in a new window) Read Our Plustek OpticFilm 120 Review With SilverFast, you need a separate program to reopen the file later. You can use the Raw File option to save the file to disk without throwing away any of the scan information and reopen it to tweak the image and resave it later as a TIFF or JPG. One of VueScan's advantages compared with SilverFast is that you don't need a separate program to post-process the image. Either program will let you tweak your scans to get better results than you'll get with the software the scanner comes with. VueScan's most obvious competition is SilverFast Ai Studio 8, another, significantly more expensive, scan utility that also works with a long list of scanners from various companies, and also offers lots of sophisticated features. But if you want to coax the best possible quality out of whatever scanner you have, VueScan is well worth the investment. Beyond that, unless you're serious about getting high-quality photo scans, there's no reason at all to get the program. One reason is that you might have an older scanner that doesn't have a driver for the OS on your new computer. Difficult to master, with the best settings not always the obvious ones.Įvery scanner comes with its own scan utility, so you might wonder why you would need to buy another one, like VueScan 9 Professional Edition ($79.95) from Hamrick Software.How to Set Up Two-Factor Authentication.

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