![]() ![]() The B&W version harkens back to me watching Star Trek on a 9-inch B&W television. The detail remains in this scanned image of actress Susan Oliver in the original Star Trek pilot “The Cage”. I’ll get back to how well those slide frames worked later, but for now, suffice it to say that they still exist for over 44 years since I first purchased them. I bought very high-end protective slide frames for them. Their son, Rod, now runs the company.Īmong my purchases were 35mm individual frames from Star Trek episodes. As a teenager, I bought several items from Lincoln Enterprises, the precursor to Roddenberry Entertainment, the merchandising side of Star Trek originally owned by Gene Roddenberry and Majel Barrett Roddenberry. Roddenberry Enterprises offered some 1982 film strips from Star Trek II: The Wrath of Kahn. I started thinking about this at this year’s San Diego Comic-Con. I’m mostly paperless now, but there are a few old things I hold on to that could and should be digital and are not yet. It has tirelessly scanned thousands of pages of my old print articles, handouts from conferences, product manuals, research papers, content from old magazines, references to my participation in conference brochures, and many other things. My Epson RR-600W has done a great job of removing old paper from my life and keeping new paper at bay. Buy on Amazon Kodak Slide N Scan Digital Film Scanner Review ![]()
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