
You can open and view Photo CD images individually on your
computer screen. You can copy and save them, print them, paste
them into word-processing documents or other documents that
accept graphics, and edit them using graphics applications. You
can also view your Photo CD images displayed in a series on your
computer screen as you would view a slide presentation.
Photo CD images are an excellent source of graphics for desktop
publishing, multimedia presentations, business documents, and
professional-quality graphic design.
S Important: To view Photo CD images on your Macintosh,
you must have QuickTime and the Photo CD extension in
your System Folder. Both were automatically placed on
your computer when system software was installed. To
reinstall the Photo CD extension, refer to “Setting Up Your
CD-ROM Software,” earlier in this manual, for installation
instructions.
S
Obtaining Photo CD discs
You can have your own photographs recorded as Photo CD
images on a Photo CD disc. To obtain a Photo CD disc of your
own photographs, you give standard 35-millimeter film to a
photofinisher who has a Kodak Photo CD System. The
photofinisher develops your film, digitizes the photographs, and
returns a Photo CD disc to you containing your Photo CD images.
A single Photo CD disc can hold approximately 100 images or
more.
You can take a Photo CD disc back to your photofinisher and have
more photos added until the disc is full. Such discs are called
multisession discs because the photofinisher can add more
images to them after the first session of adding images. The
AppleCD 300i can read both single-session and multisession
Photo CD discs. (Some CD-ROM drives may be unable to read the
additional images placed on a multisession disc. Such drives can
read only single-session discs.)
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