(Translated D --> GB via Google Translator) With all the praise and praise for the SV 600 "long neck" scanner, it's worth mentioning what it CANNOT do. Every day I scan double pages from tuning magazines, including pages with dark borders. I'm used to a lot of manual work now. The SV 600 is actually only suitable for light surfaces. It quickly reaches its limits on documents with a dark border. The distinction between the black base and dark overlays, a dark blue is sufficient, is not recognized. In this case, the lasso assumes a neutral position at the edge because it cannot “see” the difference between the base and the scan object. A white background helps, but this also requires manual intervention. It also becomes critical with templates that have dark edges on the one hand and light edges on the other. Only piecemeal helps here, which means: Push the black original template and white cover sheets under the object in the dark areas so that the scanner recognizes the edges. The lasso has to be placed manually, although the perfectly straight line is not the problem. The lasso, which can only be changed horizontally, freaks out and sometimes leaves lines that have already been placed quite unmotivated. Although the scanner is conveniently located in daylight, it seems to get too little light as standard. It only works with white documents, but that is excellent as described in the propaganda
This might be a great tool for visually handicapped persons, however, the software provided with the device is not suitable in this case. Is there a way to save raw scans automatically in a folder upon pressing the Scan-button on the scanner (i.e. without any confirmation/initiation of the saving action on the computer screen)? In this case, a third party application would be able to evaluate the scan (e.g. read it loudly). Maybe raw scans are saved to a temporary folder which might be supervised by a third party application?