Blog Archives

Mustek A3 Scanner in Adobe CS4

April 5th, 2009 by Brychanus

I keep a super-sized Mustek A3 1200 USB scanner around for big scanning jobs. Its antiquated driver works fine in Windows XP, but when I want to use it on my Macbook, I had to virtualize Windows just to scan (Mustek’s drivers are ancient). Tonight I discovered that while the TWAIN driver for Photoshop CS4 doesn’t see the scanner when run as a native Intel application, if I check the “Open using Rosetta” box in Photoshop’s properties then run the application, the A3 1200 USB is sitting there happily in my Import/Export list. Life is happiness indeed. No stitching together partial-page scans for me!

Of couse, now I wonder if I could have been doing this all along, and I merely stumbled upon it while configuring CS4.

Compy III Update – Mouse!

December 10th, 2008 by Brychanus

Once upon a time, I put a tiny Windows machine inside an Apple III’s case. See this page for details.

At long last, I’ve hacked open a few mice and made a matching one-button mouse with the innards of a Logitech optical USB mouse. Sure, it can only left-click, but that’s part of the charm!

By the way, I switched the Logitech mouse to a blue diode in 2002 just to see if I could. It wasn’t part of the project this time. Yes, the accuracy suffers a little. This is part of why I chose to cannibalize it for the Compy III project.

Mouse Innards Plugged In

Movie Set Construction in A2

July 22nd, 2008 by Brychanus

There’s a strange building under construction at my bus stop downtown. It’s in the parking lot of an empty storefront, and it has no foundation. The contractors call it a movie set, and said “they” are going to “crash cars into it”. I’ll update if I learn more.

photo photo

Illustrator CS3 – Pressure Option Fix

July 21st, 2008 by Brychanus

We have an undergrad intern at my company this summer working on some illustrations for one of our projects. She’s using Illustrator CS3 with an older USB Wacom Intuos tablet (ours) on a MacBook (hers). She installed the driver from Wacom’s website, and for the most part the tablet worked fine. However, when she tried to create a pressure-sensitive Caligraphic Brush, she found all the pressure-related options grayed out in the configuration dialog.

A quick review of Google results revealed a collection of useless leads. Forums tended to have people ask the question, only to have it go unsolved. I’m bothering to blog about this in the hope that someone else will find it, and my solution will work for them.

In the Wacom Pref Pane in System Preferences, it lists all installed tablets at the top of the page. Below that, it lists available “Tools” for the selected tablet. I noticed that our intern’s driver had two of the same 6×8 Intuos installed, and while one of them had a pen listed in Tools, the other only listed the function buttons. We hit the [ - ] button to remove the penless tablet, leaving only the copy with the pen. After a restart, Illustrator recognized the pen’s presence, and the grayed out options were restored.

If you’re having this problem and that doesn’t help, good luck in your search for an answer. Expect to find a lot of “reinstall the driver/Illustrator.”

A Subtle Jab at MSFT by AAPL?

February 5th, 2008 by Brychanus

bluescreen While using Finder in Leopard today, I couldn’t help but notice the variation in the icons. I’d noticed before that older iMacs have white screen edges, and Windows machines look older, but it just struck me this afternoon that the icon for Windows machines shows a classic Blue Screen of Death. It seems like an Apple icon designer was poking fun at the PC on this one.

Ironically, Leopard was incorrectly identifying our Apple Airport Extreme as a PC in the network list with this icon.