Visioneer OneTouch 8900 USB Scanner

(199 Reviews)

Price
$191.99

Quantity
(10000 available )

Total Price
Share
16 Ratings
2
3
1
2
8
Reviews
  • Blue Excell

    > 24 hour

    One star is too good for this product.. ive had a visioneer 8700 USB about a year.. it just died..the scanner keeps telling me to unlock the scan head.. i physically removed the lock.. despite restarting the pc, reinstalling etc etc.. the fault persists.. The online help is useless, there are no specific references to the fault though i have found a large number of references ( but no solutions to it) on the web.. I cant reccomend the scanner.. there are equal and better second hand scanners on the market.. that dont suffer this fault. I cant recommend the visioneer online support.. i still have a dead scanner.. I cant really think of anything good to say about visioneer.. i wish i had never wasted money on it...

  • J. Messiha

    > 24 hour

    This scanner is a few models up from the best scanner I ever had. Easy to use, good quality, and long lasting thus far. Even if it breaks in a year, dont be silly... 35 bucks? Throw it out and get the latest model. Keep the USB cable and sell it for 5 bucks... to anyone who has recently bought a USB Printer... they almost never come with the cable. hahah.. Whatver, I have the Visioneer 8100 and its almost exactly the same as this one and it rocks. PEACE OUT.

  • D. Friedland

    > 24 hour

    First of all, if youre a Mac user, dont even bother. Move on. This is not a Mac (OSX or 9) friendly scanner. When I tried it just out of the box, I was very happy with its performance. Now, however, I cant even get it to scan--this machine will only operate with its original power supply (although Visioneer will happily send you a new one for only [more money). This product is not for those with a tendency to lose things! It boils down to this: Decent hardware. Software is lacking. Very bulky scanner. Tech support is a bargain at $2 per minute (on this model).

  • $100 Bill

    > 24 hour

    Out of the box it had an intermittant problem. You get an error box that says the optical module is locked. Only it isnt. Go to the web site and they have a virtual troubleshooter that is absolutely of no use. Call the company customer service and they tell you to call tech support,(at $2.00 per minute on a 900 line. Because this is out of production, they dont care. Definitely dont buy this for a quarter. It would be a waste of a good quarter

  • Mick Tenrab

    > 24 hour

    I have the 8920 which is the same scanner with a slide scanner...it is entirely possible that they have COMPLETELY different hardware under the hood, but I doubt it. No problems...but one curious issue. The glass lid is not designed for being pushed on, and the holders (on the left side as you look at it) can come loose. If they do, or if you press down on the glass...like if you are scanning a book...that can stop the scan head, and of course the computer will assume the lock is still on. This has happened to me a couple of times. If you shake it (gently) you will hear the holders (little plastic pieces) on the bottom. Yes it is a silly and sloppy design, HOWEVER, put them back in place and press on...mine didnt drop loose until after 2.5 years of use.

  • Jones

    > 24 hour

    I dont know what the heck everyone else is complaining about. Ive had this scanner for more than two years and the only problem Ive had is that I now have to jiggle the cord to get the power supply to stay on. Thats probably because Ive used the thing so darn much. Ive scanned hundreds of pictures that came out extremely crisp and sharp and have used the TextBridge (OCR) software to scan chapters of books into Word. The software that comes with this Visioneer 8900 is definitely not intuitive but thats okay with me because I use Corel to do all my photo editing. All it takes is a little patience the first time to learn how to adjust the scanning quality and color. After that, it should be a breeze. One the downside - this scanner first came out three years ago so its a bit bulky and there are slimmer, sleeker models now available. But, if you can purchase one used for about $30-$40, its definitely worth it.

  • Faedorah Jones

    > 24 hour

    This is by far, the biggest piece of garbage that it has ever been my misfortune to buy. If everything Visioneer makes is like this, they deserve to go out of business. I cannot believe they can foist off this kind of junk and get by with it. I will never buy another product with Visioneer on it. Period. This scanner was a HUGE waste of money, not to mention a very good source of frustration. It worked long enough to scan about 5 items...but none of those consequtively. It will scan one, then if youre lucky you might get another scan out if after about 25 hours of fooling with it and its pathetic connections, (lots of luck getting any decent drivers or updates) and countless reboots of your computer. Buy a real scanner, send this one to your enemies.

  • T. A. Becker

    > 24 hour

    For about $100, I got the Visioneer One Touch 8900 USB flatbed scanner, have used it on my older computer for many years running, and have been satisfied with its performance. My operating system is Windows ME (yup, there are a few of us still around) and Ive utilized the PaperPort Twain software bundled with the scanner. While it takes some getting used to and you may have to repeat the scan several times, by then you know what youre doing without making further mistakes and the results obtained are acceptable most of the time and occasionally downright excellent. A high quality print obtained with film technology is usually not going to yield anywhere near the same result when transferred to digital information because some degradation is unavoidable, but if you up the resolution from the preset level, adjust exposure and color balance as needed, sharpen with restraint, then crop and size carefully, you can do pretty well. In the darkroom, particularly the color darkroom, youll put far more effort into making a high quality enlargement and the results obtained will be eminently superior in several ways, but thats to be expected. In the last few months, I used this unit to scan a number of high quality photographs, several of which were decades old, in order to embed them in the text of desktop published books. In so doing, I achieved pretty darn good results, considering the limitations of the equipment. Im now looking for a dedicated film scanner to scan medium format and 35mm color negs directly, hopefully giving me darkroom quality results, but nonetheless, this workhorse economy flatbed scanner has more than paid for itself over the last several years and I therefore must give it an enthusiastic thumbs up. Ill agree with the critics who point out that Visioneers support leaves much to be desired because I tried to contact them regarding a software upgrade (for scanning film -- obviously bundled with the 8920) and couldnt get anywhere at all, but a bad attitude in the computer world combined with lackluster or nonexistent support is hardly unique to Visioneer.

  • Brian Rayne

    > 24 hour

    I bought this refurbished and its a good thing too because I missed the locking problem a lot of people have been mentioning. The scanner worked decently in the beginning when I was using it in Windows 98, sometimes Id have to fight with it to get it to work right, but it usually did. Then when I upgraded to XP Pro SP2, it installed fairly easy. But intermittantly, and with increasing frequency, their XP driver crashes (usually in mid-scan), and I constantly have to reinstall the driver to keep working on my scans. The scans I have made with this were all beautiful, and when its working, its a pleasure to use. But Visioneer writes really crappy drivers. Theres no way their XP driver got a real Designed for XP rating from Windows Hardware Quality Labs, no designed-for-xp software would work so poorly and place all the blame on SP2. I have been wondering whether to go to the hassle to dual-boot to Windows 98 whenever I want to use the scanner, or to buy a new scanner. I think Im going to buy a different brand, and you probably should too.

  • Jon kjasdf

    > 24 hour

    Dont Waste your time or money that you think your saving, spend a little more on quality like an Epson. The age old saying You get what you pay for applies double here. The worst drivers/Quality Etc. You cant unplug it (USB) without it wanting to reinstall the drivers again,

来自制造商

The Visioneer OneTouch 8900 USB is an excellent scanning solution that grows with you. It"s easy to use: just press a button and Visioneer"s OneTouch technology gives perfect results on everyday scanning tasks.

Its 1,200 x 4,800 dpi Optical Resolution eliminates jagged edges and captures the finest detail from your original. That"s enough resolution to turn a 4-by-6-inch photo into a 16-by-24-inch image with no loss of detail.

The 48-bit scanners capture 64 times more color than their 42-bit predecessors do, for a total of 280 trillion colors. It"s like drawing with a whole box of pencils rather than just one. With 48-bit scanning, you get brighter yellows, richer reds, cooler blues, and everything in between.

Advanced users will enjoy the powerful features of the Visioneer Scan Manager Pro driver, ScanSoft PaperPort Deluxe 7, and Adobe Photoshop LE software. You"ll find everything you need to correct poor-quality originals or to enhance your images with artistic and creative effects.

Related products

Shop
( 1654 Reviews )
Top Selling Products