Thirty five mm slide scanners are easy to use. Scanning thirty five mm slides allows photos to be preserved for future generations and for memories. http://www.ehow.com/how_4425831_scan-35mm-photo-slides.html
Use a Epson RX620 flatbedscanner with builtin slide scanning ability. There are three ways, and that's one of them. They also make "slide scanners." These are flatbeds big enough just to accept a slide, and they've usually just got a little slot in the front to put it in. The best quality comes from drum scanners.
35
The average price for a scanner with 35 mm slides range from 40 to 80 dollars. Price varies from store to store. SO best bet is to checkout amazon for deals.
35 percent = 35/100 = 0.35 So easy!
easy, its just plain 35.
The HP Scanjet 5590 is designed for business use and costs approximately $400. It features a 50-sheet ADF, a 35-mm transparency adapter, and scans slides and strips of film.
Most name brand scanners will work with a Mac. Many can have a slide attachment added. Choices will depend upon your budget, quality required, and quantity to be scanned - can it be done manually or will it need to be automated. The VueScan software (See links below) is well regarded and supports a number of scanners operating with Mac OS X 10.6.
Powerpoint Presentations, Flip Charts, Overhead Transparencies, Posters, 35 Millimeter Slides and Audio-Slide Show.
I don't think there is a safe way to store slides. In slide holders in a cool dark place, but what happens if you have a flood...or something else. I would recommend scanning them and digitally preserving them on a website for future generations. Just see my link on my profile.
you don't get 35, you get 20.
Most code scanners that you can purchase for home use do not include the ability to read ABS trouble codes. You will need to find a code scanner that can read the ABS codes.
Easy to do. Just multiply the two dimensions: 55 x 35 = 1,925 square feet.