Once I had such a lockup under Netscape, without scanning, but that was
incomplete at first: I could login with the ssh and kill & restart X,
but couldn't shut it down sensibly without it locking up the system.
I usually am used to that with Windows, but not with Linux.
That system ran stable before.
>
> > - color inversion: When preview in halftone or lineart mode,
> > the results are inverted, and after switching to 24bit color the colors
>
> This is a known bug in the version of the backend that was distributed
> with sane-0.73. You might want to try
> ftp://ftp.muc.de/people/bernds/mtek2/microtek2-0.3.tar.gz.
> This version fixes the bug with the inverted 1-bit modes (and maybe it
> helps that the system doesn't lock).
Will try it.
>
> > Does anyone here use the Microtek TMA?
> > Is yes: Is the "interface" to the scanner simple (switch type) or
> > complex (electronics)?
>
> I do not completely understand what you mean with this question, but at
> least I can tell that a backend must support a TMA, and this is currently
> not the case with the microtek(2) backend.
Not neccesarely. The Windows (3.1)-program does not allow the user to
choose the media type without a TMA being installed. It seems, as if the
small D-SUB connector on the rear of the scanner is the interface to the
TMA and the ASF, and enables it. I was not able to find reasonable
information about it, but am assuming some type of an identification
function.
The reason for the question: I was sold a "universal" TMA that works
nicely, but is not strong enough to manage against the main lamp.
Returning it usually would be no problem, but I ont get to the shop in
the next time...
cu
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