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card are opened into separate windows in Adobe Photoshop. Once acquired you can use all Photoshop features to edit the images and save them in the variety of file formats available in Photoshop.
IMPORTANT: Throughout this chapter we refer to “Photoshop.” This single reference refers to both the Macintosh and PC versions of Photoshop 4.0, and also to other supported PC
Rotate, crop, color balance, name, and annotate images.
Copy images from the PCMCIA card in your camera to folders (sub- directories) on your computer hard disk; these images are called archive images. You can then use the driver to access and manipulate archive images from a folder just as you can do with images directly from a PCMCIA card.
Use the software to view unrecorded test shots you make with the connected camera, and then begin recording images when all settings meet your requirements for the image.
Format PCMCIA cards and load firmware into the camera.
Delete image and sound files.
Play recorded sound files.
NOTES: This chapter assumes that you have installed the KODAK driver and that you know how to connect the camera to your computer. Refer to chapter 4 for information if needed.
The settings you choose while in the driver image window are maintained automatically from session to session.
You should ensure that the gamma for your monitor is calibrated properly per instructions accompanying Adobe Photoshop; if it is not, images may be consis- tently too light or too dark.