If you're overwhelmed by dozens of storage boxes of old family photos, Epson has a solution that will scan the prints from two to three rolls of film in about a minute. Seriously. Front and back. In ...
The Epson FastFoto FF-680W is a sheet-feed desktop scanner that excels at scanning stacks of snapshots while doing a credible job at document scanning. Rejoice! You won't have to scan photo prints one ...
The FF-680W is not cheap at $799, but you'll probably pay around 50c per photo plus shipping if you use a commercial scanning service. And when you have processed the entire collection of photos, you ...
LONG BEACH, Calif., Aug. 7, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- Epson today expanded its high-speed scanning line with the new Wi-Fi 1 enabled FastFoto ® FF-680W High-Speed Photo and Document Scanning System. The FF ...
Epson’s new Wi-Fi enabled FastFoto FF-680W high-speed photo and document scanning system is designed to make it easy to digitise hard copy photos and documents. The new FastFoto FF-680W personal photo ...
Gift 5 articles to anyone you choose each month when you subscribe. It's hard to say what's the most difficult thing about using Epson's brilliant new photo scanner, the FastFoto FF-680W. Is it the ...
Rejoice! You won't have to scan photo prints one by one anymore, or risk having them ripped in your scanner's document feeder. The Epson FastFoto FF-680W ($599.99) is a worthy successor to the Epson ...
Epson's FF-680W scanner is a convenient way of digitising a sizeable collection of photos, and then it has a second life as a document scanner. Installing the FF-680W with a Mac is a two-stage affair.
Let's face it. The process of digitizing photos is mind-numbingly slow: the laying of each photo on the scanner and waiting the agonizing minutes for each to be scanned, then saving each photo. And ...
Epson's new (and aptly-named) FastFoto FF-680W ($599.99 on Epson, check price on Amazon) is so fast and easy, it makes digitizing photos fun. You simply place up to three dozen 3.5x5, 4x6 or 5x7 ...
Since 2004, I have worked on PCMag’s hardware team, covering at various times printers, scanners, projectors, storage, and monitors. I currently focus my testing efforts on 3D printers, pro and ...