[log in to unmask] wrote: > archive.org scans typically include a color card target > image near the back (or front) of the book, e.g. That's great. But where do you buy these target cards? And are they useful for testing small compact cameras? An important difference between the bkrpr.org (book ripper) and the Scribe is that cheap cameras with cheap lenses and uneven lighting are used. That means we need to calibrate (or test) the resolution and colors in different corners of the image. With the Scribe, you can assume that these are even across the whole image. My standard Ubuntu and Firefox failed to view the Jpeg-2000 image. > 1 8x8x5' scribe structure > 2 Canon EOS 5Ds These are design decisions from 2003 or so. Today you would at least use the Digital Rebel XSi (EOS 450D) which gives 12 megapixels at a fraction of the price of the EOS 5D. I also think (?) the Scribe uses a 100 mm lens, which puts the camera at more than 1 meter away from the glass. A 50 mm lens would cut that distance (and the size of the whole machine) in half. But all such design revisions only bring us to 2007; they fall flat compared to the 2009 book ripper's radical use of the PowerShot A590 compact camera, mounted 12 inches away from the book, all inside a single plexiglass cube. > we scan over 1,000 books a day with about 100 scribes like this. Are any of these in Europe? Is there a plan to convince European libraries to join the Internet Archive's system? -- Lars Aronsson ([log in to unmask]) Project Runeberg - free Nordic literature - http://runeberg.org/