Instruction Manual E: 9222-7300-11 P-B308/KME-0311 2.3
Instruction Manual E: 9222-7300-11 P-B308/KME-0311 2.3
Instruction Manual E: 9222-7300-11 P-B308/KME-0311 2.3
9222-7300-11 P-B308/KME-0311
INSTRUCTION MANUAL
2.3
BEFORE YOU
BEGIN
Before installing the DiMAGE Viewer software, read the data-transfer section in the camera manual.
This section details how to connect the camera to a computer using the supplied USB cable. The s in
this manual assume the camera is connected to the computer with a USB cable as described in the
camera manual.
This instruction manual does not provide instruction in the basic operation of the personal computers,
or the basic operation of Windows or Macintosh operating systems; refer to the manuals supplied
with the computer.
The examples in this manual use Windows software. The appearance of the screens may differ from
the examples when using Macintosh or other Windows operating systems.
Every precaution has been taken to ensure the accuracy of this material. Contact Konika Minolta if
you have any questions. Konika Minolta is not responsible for any loss or damage caused by the use
of this software.
This instruction manual may not be copied either in part or in its entirety without the prior permission
of Konika Minolta.
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CD-ROM drive
QuickTime 5 or later
QuickTime 4 or later
Refer to the DiMAGE Viewer CD-ROM for Windows and Macintosh operating system requirements.
The requirements are printed on the CD-ROM disk. Compatibility with Windows XP is with the Home
or Professional editions only.
Computers with Windows 98 operating systems require Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.0 or later.
SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
The license agreement appears. If you accept the agreement, click Yes to continue the installation routine.
Read the entire license agreement carefully before continuing. If you do not agree to the terms, click No to exit the
installation program.
INSTALLATION
When the installation screen appears click Next> to begin the setup.
The license agreement appears. If you accept the agreement, click Yes
to continue the installation routine.
Read the entire license agreement carefully before continuing. If you do
not agree to the terms, click No to exit the installation program.
10
INSTALLATION
The location for the DiMAGE Viewer files must be specified. Click
the reference button.
A window will appear when the software has been installed. Click
Finish to exit the installer.
11
12
13
IMPORTING
14
To set up the Viewer to play back audio files, select the preferences option from the file menu to open the dialog box.
Click on the view button next to the WAV file playback application text box to display the open dialog box.
15
16
To edit or add a
subject line in the
data display see
page 25.
17
The sort menu can also be used to change the display between ascending and descending order.
The reverse-order button on the tool bar will also change the display order.
SELECTING THUMBNAILS
Click on the thumbnail boarders or file icon to select a single
image. To select multiple images, press and hold the control key
(Windows) or command key (Macintosh) and then click on each
image; the selected frames will have a dark border. To deselect
an image, click on the thumbnail or icon a second time while
holding the control key (Windows) or command key (Macintosh).
To select consecutive images, press and hold the shift key and
then click on the first and last image of the series. Press the control key (Windows) or command key (Macintosh) and A key at
the same time to select all images.
18
19
CREATING FOLDERS
New folders can be created to store images. Click on the desired
location for the new folder. In this example the new folder will be
placed in Camera Images.
20
New-folder button
21
New-folder button
22
Copy
Paste
Delete
Select the folder or images to be moved. Click the cut or copy button. The display will not change
when a cut is made until the paste has been completed. Click on the new location for the folder or
images. Click the paste button to complete the operation.
When a delete command is given, a confirmation screen will appear. Clicking the yes button
will execute the command and delete the data,
clicking the no button will cancel the delete
command.
23
24
25
BASIC
IMAGE PROCESSING
IMAGE-CORRECTION WINDOW
The image-correction window displays the utilitys image-processing tools. Adjustments to color, contrast, brightness, and saturation can be made. This section contains details on the basic image-processing tools. For descriptions of the advanced tools, see pages 46 though 73.
Tool bars
Color histogram
display
26
Tool bars
Index-display button (p. 28)
Magnifying button (p. 31)
Grab button (p. 31)
Rotate-left button (p. 29)
Rotate-right button (p. 29)
Flip-horizontal button (p. 29)
Flip-vertical button (p. 29)
Data imprinting button
(p. 38)
27
The color-correction window will display the image number and the total number of images loaded.
Clicking on the arrows on each side of the display will load the previous or next image.
28
The orientation of the displayed image can be changed with the flip and rotate buttons on the tool bar
or with the tool menu. Any changes to image orientation will be applied to the thumbnail image in the
index display.
Rotate - the rotate-right button rotates the
thumbnail 90 clockwise and the rotate-left
button rotates the thumbnail 90 counterclockwise each time the buttons are clicked.
Original image
Flip - when an image is flipped, it
will create a mirror image.
29
30
Grab tool
When an image is larger than the display area,
the grab tool can be used to scroll the image.
Click the grab button on the tool bar or select
Grab Tool from the cursor option on the view menu. Click
and drag on the image to scroll.
Magnifying tool
The display image can be enlarged or reduced.
Click the magnifying button on the tool bar or
select Magnifying Tool from the cursor option on
the view menu. Click on the image to enlarge. To reduce,
hold down the shift (Windows) or option key (Macintosh)
and click on the image. When the image has reached the
magnification limit, the plus or minus sign in the magnifying icon will disappear.
Enlarge
Reduce
Menu options
The zoom option on the view menu controls the size of the display image. As
well as the magnifying tools enlarge and
reduce functions and fit-to-window function, the menu can display the image at
actual size or at preset magnifications.
The tool bar, status bar, histogram,
image information, and snapshot display
areas can be hidden or shown by selecting the appropriate option on the menu.
31
VARIATION PALETTE
The variation palette allows an image to be corrected by comparing it to other slightly corrected
images surrounding it. This is an easy method to correct images for individuals who are inexperienced in image processing or photofinishing.
Click the variation button or select Variation
from the image-correction option on the correction menu to display the palette.
Click the arrow next to the variation list box to select the image quality to be corrected: color balance,
brightness and contrast, or saturation. Each variation palette shows the current image in the center
with corrected samples displayed around it.
32
Checking the display-limit check box will indicate when any of the image values exceed 0 (black limit)
or 255 (white limit) with the complementary color. For example, if the blue area of the image exceeds
those values, the limit is displayed with the complementary color, yellow.
Click the close button to close the palette to apply any image corrections.
33
34
AN INTRODUCTION TO COLOR
In photography, red, green, and blue are the
primary colors. The secondary colors, cyan,
magenta, and yellow, are made from combining the primary colors: cyan = blue + green,
magenta = blue + red, and yellow = red +
green. The primary and secondary colors are
grouped in complementary pairs: red and
cyan, green and magenta, and blue and yellow.
RED
MAGENTA
BLUE
YELLOW
GREEN
35
Original image
Corrected image
Changes made with the magnifying tool, grab tool, or scroll bars on one image will be applied to the
other. Using the fit-to-window button automatically resizes both images to fit the display area.
36
Click the undo button to cancel the last image correction applied to the image. Image corrections can continue to be undone as far as the computer memory capacity allows.
Click the redo button to reapply the last image correction canceled with the undo button.
Click the reset-all button to cancel all image corrections applied to the image.
37
DATA IMPRINTING
The date and time of recording, file name, and the subject
line can be imprinted into the
image. To add a subject line to
an image, see page 25.
Select the imprinting-setup
option from the tool menu to
open the setup dialog box.
38
The font color can be specified. Click the fontcolor button to open the color dialog box. 48
colors are available. Click on the color sample
to select it.
Luminance
Hue / Saturation
39
SAVING
IMAGES
SAVING AN IMAGE
Click the save button on the tool bar or select the save option on the file
menu. The image will be saved in its original location overwriting the current
file. If a JPEG image is saved, the save-as dialog box will open; the location
and compression rate must be specified, see next page.
40
SAVING IMAGES
41
PRINTING
With the image to be printed displayed in
the correction window, click the print button
or select the print option from the file menu
to open the print setup window.
42
PRINTING
Position
The image can be positioned within the printing area. Simply click on the appropriate radio buttons.
Changes are immediately displayed in the preview area.
Size
Clicking the top radio button allows manual adjustments based on printing resolution or dimensions.
Enter the print resolution or one of the dimensions in the text box and click the apply button; the other
two values and the preview display change accordingly. Millimeters or inches can be specified for the
dimensions. With manual adjustments, the print image can be made bleed to the edge of the printing
area by setting the dimensions larger than the area.
Click the size-to-page radio button to automatically size the image to the printing area. The print size
can be adjusted between 1% and 100% of the printing area in integers. Click the apply button each
time the percentage of reproduction is change to see the result in the preview area.
Preview area
To preview the affect of the printing parameters. When the any of the size settings are changed, the
apply button must be used to view the change.
Printer setup
To access the setup dialog box of the printer.
Print
To print the image.
Close
To close the print window without printing the image.
43
44
PRINTING
Select from the following setting to lay out the index sheets. All changes are reflected in the preview
display.
Rows x Column - to lay out the images in a specified number of horizontal rows and vertical
columns.
Size - to select the pixel dimensions of the index sheet. The greater the number of pixels, the fine the
image resolution and the larger the file size.
Thumbnail frame - to print a black frame around each image. The frame can indicate the extent of
an image that has a large area of white near the edges such as a cloudy sky.
Folder & Page Number - to print the folder name and location of the images and the page number
and total number of pages.
Caption - to print the file name and date and time of recording under each image.
Title - to print a title at the top of each sheet.
The font, font style, and point size can be specified for the folder
path and page number, caption, and title. Simply click the fontsetup button to open the font dialog box. The sample area will
reflect the settings. The script can be selected from the dropdown menu at the bottom of the window. The fonts and scripts
available vary with the computer system.
45
ADVANCED
IMAGE PROCESSING
This section covers the advanced image-processing tools in the DiMAGE Viewer. Adjustments to
color, contrast, brightness, hue, and saturation can be made. Functions to view and save image corrections are also available. The basic image-processing section on pages 26 through 39 should be
read before continuing.
Sharpness button (p. 62)
Tone curve/histogram button (p. 47)
Hue, saturation, and lightness button (p. 60)
Area-marquee (p. 64)
Snapshot button (p. 65)
Save image-correction
Job button (p. 66)
Load image-correction
Job button (p. 67)
RGB value display
The RGB display will show the color values for any point on the image. The first number are the values for the original image before corrections are applied followed by the current values. Simply place
the mouse pointer on the image area to see the RGB values of that point. Pressing the shift key
(Windows) or command key (Macintosh) will display the CMY values.
46
Color-histogram button
Auto-setting button
Reset button
47
Place the mouse pointer over the tone curve. Click and drag
the curve.
Each time the tone curve is clicked, a new node will be
attached to the curve. The nodes can be moved by clicking
and dragging. The input and output levels of the node are displayed as it is moved. The input level (horizontal axis) refers
to the original image, and the output level (vertical axis) refers
to the correction applied to the image.
Any corrections made on the tone curve are immediately
applied to the displayed image. By placing the mouse pointer
on the displayed image, the grey or color level of that point
will be indicated on the tone curve by a white circle.
The reset button cancels all corrections in all channels.
48
To smooth a rough freehand curve, click the smoothcurve button (2). Nodes will be automatically placed
on the curve and can be adjusted with the mouse.
With extreme freehand curves, the smooth curve button may significantly change the shape of the curve.
Click the undo button to return to the original freehand curve.
49
Highlights
Output
Midtones
Shadows
The bottom left portion of the graph represents the dark colors
and shadow areas of the image. The middle section represents
the mid-tones: skin, grass, blue sky. The top right section is the
highlights: clouds, lights. Changing the tone curve can affect the
brightness, contrast, and color of the image.
Input
50
Increasing contrast
The contrast of an image can be changed. The light
blue 45 line on the tone-curve graph represents
the original contrast of the image. Making the angle
of the tone curve greater than 45 will increase the
contrast of the image. Making the angle less than
45 will reduce the contrast.
With the RGB channel selected, click on the tone curve near the top and bottom to add two nodes.
Slightly move the top node up and the bottom node down. This will increase the angle of the central
portion of the tone curve and increase the contrast of the image without making an overall change in
image brightness.
Correcting color
By selecting individual color channels on the tone curve, adjustments to the overall color of an image
can be made. This can be used to eliminate unnatural color casts or add warmth to a picture.
If the image is too red, green, or blue, simply drag the corresponding color-channel curve down until
the color appears natural. If the color cast is predominantly one of the secondary colors, cyan,
magenta, or yellow, move the curve of the complementary color up. For example, if the image is too
yellow, move the blue curve up. For more on color, see page 35.
51
Click the white-point button; the mouse pointer changes to the white dropper tool.
With the dropper tool, click on the darkest neutral area of the
image to define it as the black point. The values of the image
will be adjusted based on the selected point. The default level
for the black point is 0 for each RGB channel.
52
53
54
55
HISTOGRAM CORRECTIONS
The histogram indicates the distribution of pixels with specific brightness and color values of the displayed image. Using the histogram can maximize the output of the image data. Changes made with
the histogram are also displayed on the tone curve.
Input shadow slider
The color histograms can be displayed with the channel list box or with keyboard shortcuts. While
holding the shift key (Windows) or command key (Macintosh), press 1 to display the red channel,
2 to display the green channel, 3 to display the blue channel, or 0 (zero) to display the RGB
channel.
56
The highlight level, shadow level, and gamma can be set manually. The histogram can be used to
maximize the distribution of the pixels in the image. All the levels on the histogram are displayed
numerically to the right of the sliders. These numbers can be changed with the keyboard.
The gamma slider defines the mid-tones of the image. Dragging the gamma slider to the right will
darken the image, and dragging it to the left will brighten it. Similar to the tone-curve correction
described on page 50, the gamma slider allows the brightness of the image to be adjusted without
loosing image information.
The input highlight slider sets the white level. As the slider is moved to the left, an apparent increase
in contrast can be seen in the displayed image. All pixels to the right of the slider are set to 255 and
any image detail they may contain will be lost. This can be an important tool for improving copy
images of text on a white background. Uneven illumination, or faded or stained paper can be distracting when copying text or line art. By adjusting the white level, the imperfections of the white background can be eliminated leaving only the darker text visible.
The input shadow slider sets the black level. As the slider is moved to the right, an apparent increase
in contrast can be seen in the displayed image. All pixels to the left of the slider are set to 0 and any
image detail they may contain will be lost.
The black and white output levels can be adjusted. By moving the output highlight and shadow sliders, the contrast of the image can be reduced.
For examples of histogram corrections, see the following section.
57
By moving the highlight slider to the left to set the white point to where the pixel distribution ends, the
whites become more brilliant and the contrast increases.
This image is flat. The pixel distribution in the histogram reflects the low-contrast scene. The lack of
any strong shadows or dark tones is indicated by
the absence of pixels on the left of the histogram.
Most of the detail is concentrated in a narrow
range in the mid-tones.
58
The gamma slider can be used to change the relative distribution of the tones in the image. By moving the gamma slider to the left toward the shadows, the image becomes lighter. By moving the
gamma slider in the opposite direction, the image becomes darker. However, unlike the brightness
control in the brightness, contrast, and color-balance palette (p. 33), details are not lost in the shadows or highlights.
59
Drag the hue, saturation, or lightness slider, or enter specific values in the corresponding text box to
make corrections.
Dragging each slider to the right or inputting a positive number in the text box increases the saturation, and lightness. The hue slider rotates the colors in the image through the color space; the maximum position to the right (180) is the same as the maximum position to the left (180).
Two color spaces are displayed at the bottom of the palette. The top bar indicates the color space of
the original image. The bottom bar displays the relative changes to the color space.
Changes will be reflected in the displayed image. Click the reset button to cancel any changes.
60
Saturation
Lightness
Hue
Two color spaces are displayed at the bottom of the palette. The top bar indicates the
color space of the original image. The bottom bar displays the relative shift to the
color space. In the example, the reds have
been shifted to cyan and the yellows to
lavender.
Auto-setting button
Clicking the auto-setting button adjusts the saturation automatically without affecting the hue or lightness. Click the reset button to cancel any changes.
61
SHARPNESS
The apparent sharpness of the image can be increased. Sharpness is a very subtle, but can have a
powerful affect on overall image quality. Click the sharpness button or select Sharpness from the
image-correction option in the correction menu to open the palette.
Reduce and
enlarge buttons
The preview image can be scrolled using the mouse. Place the mouse pointer over the image area; it
will change to the grab tool. Click and drag the image to scroll. Click the display-area-preview check
box to view the effects of the sharpness controls on the image displayed in the main window.
62
Frequency slider - affects the sharpness of image details. The high frequency setting maximizes resolution, and the low-frequency setting maximizes acutance. The optimal frequency setting will vary
from image to image. It is recommended to view the image at various magnifications to judge the
results.
High-frequency setting
Low-frequency setting
Contrast slider - controls the contrast of the set frequency. The degree of sharpness can be set
between 0 and 2 in 0.1 increments. The higher the value, the greater the contrast; compare the
examples above, which are at the maximum setting, with the original image on the facing page. The
degree of sharpness can also be entered in the text box next to the slider. Like frequency, the optimal
contrast setting will vary from image to image.
Reduce and enlarge button - to adjust the size of the preview image in the sharpness window. The
preview image can be displayed at 25%, 50%, 100%, and 200%.
Reset button - resets all changes made to the image.
63
64
To return to a previous
image correction, click on
the corresponding thumbnail. The thumbnail image
will replace the displayed
image. The number of
snapshots that can be
made is only limited by the
computer memory. To
delete a snapshot, click on
the thumbnail and press
the keyboard delete key.
65
66
67
68
b
a
c
Click on the gray-point button (a) to calibrate the white balance to a point within the image; the cursor
will change to the gray-point dropper tool. When the dropper is placed in the image area, the RGB
values of that point are displayed at the top of the window (b). Click on a neutral point within the
image to make the calibration (c). The point chosen can be at any brightness level, but it must have
no definite color. Although the filter and saturation setting in the dialog box will not affect the calibration, the sliders should be set to zero so that the results can be judged.
A Konika Minolta color meter can be used to measure the approximate color temperature of a scene
when the RAW image is captured. The recorded color temperature and CC index value from the
meter can be entered in the text boxes to set the white balance. A green CC value should be entered
as a negative integer and a magenta value as a positive integer. When making the reading, both the
the color temperature and the CC value must be recorded. See page 90 for information on color
measurement.
If the cameras filter, saturation, contrast, or sharpness controls were used when the picture was
taken, the settings will be displayed in the dialog box. Changes to these settings are reflected in the
preview image. The cursor can be used to measure the RGB values of any point within the image.
When a Vivid color image is opened, the saturation level will be set to zero (0), but the high saturation level of the color mode will be applied to the image. If color matching is on (p. 82), except when
using the original color space, any changes to the contrast will not be applied when the file is
opened.
The image brightness can be adjust by 2.0Ev with the exposure-compensation slider. The slider will
not reflect the degree of exposure compensation used when the image was captured. Like the brightness control in the brightness, contrast, and color-balance palette, detail can be lost in the highlights
and shadows. To preserve these details, it is recommended to open the image without compensating
the exposure and adjust the image brightness with the tone-curve / histogram palette (p. 47).
The reset button returns all setting to their initial position. The close button cancels any settings made
and closes the window without processing the RAW image. To apply the settings to the image data
and open the file, click the OK button.
69
2
3
5
4
70
71
BATCH PROCESSING
Multiple images can be processed and saved at
one time. Highlight the images to be processed on
the thumbnail display and then select the batch-processing option from the tools menu. The batch-processing dialog box will open.
72
Click the OK button to begin processing. The save-in dialog box will open.
Select the location to save the
images on the folder tree (1).
Specify the file type of the
images (2). If saved in the TIFF
format, the bit length must be
selected (3): 24 bit or 48 bit.
Once saved as 24 bit, images
cannot be resaved as a 48-bit
file. If saved in the JPEG format, the compression rate
should also be set (4). The
higher the compression rate the
smaller the file size and the
lower the image quality.
2
3
4
Click the change-file-name check box (5) to rename the image files. Enter the file name up to ten
characters and enter the first serial number up to five digits.
Click the OK button to begin batch processing.
73
MOVIE
ENHANCER
QuickTime must be installed on the computer system for the Movie Enhancer to be
used. For QuickTime system requirements,
see page 7.
To open a movie file in this application,
simply double click on the thumbnail in the
DiMAGE Viewer thumbnail display. To play
the movie clip back, use the controls at the
bottom of the screen. Only MOV or AVI format images can be opened.
Volume
Jog slider
Play / Pause
Reverse
Forward
Resize
When the resize button is clicked and dragged, there is a maximum limit to how large the screen
area can be. The jog slider is used in editing (p. 76).
74
MOVIE ENHANCER
FLICKER CORRECTION
The Movie Enhancer can minimize flicker in 640 X 480 (VGA) or smaller movie files. General flicker
effects the overall image area evenly. Localized flicker is isolated to only a portion of the image area;
a scene with natural light and fluorescent lighting may only show flicker in the area illuminated by the
fluorescent lights.
With the movie displayed in the main window, select the flicker-correction option from the correction menu.
The save dialog box will open; enter a new file name and specify
the location to save the file. The file can only be saved in the MOV
format.
75
Click on the first movie clip to select it; the slider bar should be dark (1). If not, choose the select-all
option from the edit menu to darken the bar and indicate the selection.
Select the copy-frame option from the edit menu.
Click on the second clip. Position the jog slider all the way to the left to attach the first clip to the
beginning of the second or all the way to the right to attach it to the end (2).
Select the paste-frame option from the edit menu to complete the operation.
76
MOVIE ENHANCER
In the first movie file, use the jog slider to locate the beginning of the section to be pasted.
While pressing the shift key, drag the jog slider to mark the frames in the section (1); the slider bar
darkens to indicate the selected section. To deselect the section, click on a gray area on the slider
bar.
Select the copy-frame option from the edit menu.
On the second movie clip, use the jog slider to locate the point to paste the copied section (2).
Select the paste-frame option from the menu to complete the operation.
77
78
MOVIE ENHANCER
Color corrects the overall color cast of an image. The higher the level, the greater the color balance is
shifted toward neutral. Contrast controls the relative brightness levels. The higher the level, the
brighter the highlights and the darker the shadows. Saturation controls the vividness of colors.
Sharpness controls the sharpness of image details. Brightness controls how bright the image is.
The advanced setup palette has five correction settings for color, contrast, saturation, sharpness, and
brightness. Selected with the drop-down menu for each of the five image qualities, low, standard, and
high are preset levels, manual setup activates the slider for manual adjustments, and no correction
turns off the correction function.
79
ADVANCED
SETUP
The radio button indicates the application used to open still images and
movie clips. To link a new application,
click the others radio button and then
the view button; the open dialog box
will be displayed. Select the new application and click the open button. The
file path will be displayed in the preference window. Click OK to complete the
setup.
80
ADVANCED SETUP
To open a file in the application, drag and drop the file onto the icon or highlight the file and select
the application from the open-with option on the file menu.
To remove the application from the display, click on the icon and then use the delete button on the
tool bar or keyboard to delete it. This also resets the preference box.
81
Original Color Space (sRGB) - the color space of the camera image is not converted to a standard
color space. This color space is recommended for images captured with a Konica Minolta DiMAGE
digital camera. The DiMAGE Viewer, monitor, and printer interprets the color as sRGB for reproduction purposes, but does not convert the original camera color space.
Original Color Space (Adobe RGB) - Adobe-RGB color-mode images captured with a Konica
Minolta digital camera, such as the DiMAGE 7Hi, A1, or A2, must be opened with this color space
unless the color profile has been embedded; see the embedded camera profiles section on page 90.
As with Original Color Space (sRGB), the color space of the camera image is not converted to a
standard color space. The DiMAGE Viewer, monitor, and printer interprets the color as Adobe RGB
for reproduction purposes, but does not convert the original camera color space.
sRGB - the color space promoted by Hewlett Packard and Microsoft. Since it reflects the average PC
monitor characteristics, it is widely used around the world, and is considered to be the standard for
multi-media and Internet usage. sRGB is not suitable for professional prepress applications because
of its narrow reproduction range.
82
ADVANCED SETUP
SMPTE-C - the current television broadcasting standard used in the United States.
PAL/SECAM - the current television broadcasting standard used in Europe.
ColorMatch RGB - this standard has a wide color space and is ideal for use with Radius Press View
monitors, which are commonly used in prepress production.
Adobe RGB - this color space is wider than ColorMatch RGB. The extensive color range makes it
ideal for prepress use. However, the range is so great that it includes many colors that cannot be
reproduced with a four-color printing process.
Wide-gamut RGB - utilizing the color coordinates of the spectrum, this standard offers an extreme
range of colors. Many of the colors that can be generated cannot be reproduced on standard computer monitors or by printing technology.
NTSC - the current television broadcasting standard used in Japan.
CIE RGB - this color space is defined by the CIE.
Use ICC Profile - to employ a specific ICC profile.
To use a specific profile, select the use-ICCprofile option. Click the load button and use the
open window to open the profile; the profile
name will appear in the color-preferences window. Click the OK button to set the color space
and close the color-preferences window.
83
When loaded correctly, the ICC profile will be displayed in the color preference window. The profile
can be temporarily disabled by clicking on the printer-ICC-profile check box.
84
ADVANCED SETUP
85
Windows
System
Color
WINNT
System32
Spool
Drivers
Colors
Windows
System32
Spool
Drivers
Colors
System folder
Library
Profiles
Displays
ICC profiles for a specific monitors or printers are available from the manufacturer. These may be
downloaded from the manufacturers web site. See the instruction manual of the specific device on
how to install the ICC profile.
86
ADVANCED SETUP
VIEWER
NOTES
Documents
and settings
(Logon name)
Application
data
DiMAGE
Windows
7300
Delete
Macintosh
As well as the DiMAGE Viewer application folder, the following files and folders should also be deleted:
Mac OS 9
Mac OS X
Users
System
7300
Preferences
System
Extensions
Library
CFMSupport
Library
Preferences
Logon name
Library
DSCIPLibrary2
MCMLibraryDSC2
MQTQueenLib
MQueenLib
MQTQueenLib2 MQueenLib2
7300
Preferences
7300
Delete
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Windows
1. Log on to your computer as an administrator. Open the DiMAGE Viewer application folder. If the standard installation was used, it will be located in C:\Program Files\DiMAGE
Viewer. Letters designating the hard drive can vary between computers.
2. Copy the Prefs folder into another folder in a different location. Example, C:\Job_Move.
3. Uninstall the old version of the DiMAGE Viewer using the add/remove programs or
add/remove applications (XP) routine in the control panel.
4. Install the new DiMAGE Viewer. See page 8.
5. While logging on as a user, launch the DiMAGE Viewer once and close it to create the
necessary folders.
6. Open the Prefs folder that was copied from the old DiMAGE Viewer application to show
the ImageCorrectJob and MRWCorrectJob folders.
7. Copy all the files in the ImageCorrectJob folder with an .icj extension to the following
location:
Windows XP/2000: C:Document and Settings \ (Logon user name) \ ApplicationData \
DiMAGE \ 7300 \ Prefs \ ImageCorrectJob.
Windows 98/98SE/Me: C:\ Windows \ ApplicationData \ DiMAGE \ 7300 \ Prefs \
ImageCorrectJob.
8. Copy the MRWCorrectJob folder to the following location:
Windows XP/2000: C:Document and Settings \ (Logon user name) \ ApplicationData \
DiMAGE \ 7300 \ Prefs.
Windows 98/98SE/Me: C:\ Windows \ ApplicationData \ DiMAGE \ 7300 \ Prefs.
9. Open the DiMAGE Viewer to confirm the Jobs can be loaded.
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VIEWER NOTES
Macintosh OS X
1. Log on to your computer an administrator. Open the 7300 folder:
/Library/Preferences/7300.
2. Copy the Prefs folder into another folder in a different location. Example, /Job_Move.
3. Delete the old DiMAGE Viewer application folder.
4. Install the new DiMAGE Viewer. See page 10.
5. While logging on as a user, launch the DiMAGE Viewer once and close it to create the
necessary folders.
6. Open the Prefs folder that was copied from the old DiMAGE Viewer application. Copy
all the files with an .icj and .mrj extension to the following location: /Users/(logon user
name)/Library/Preferences/7300/Prefs.
7. Open the DiMAGE Viewer to confirm the Jobs can be loaded.
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Konica Minolta is a trademark of Konica Minolta Holdings, Inc. DiMAGE is a trademark of Konica
Minolta Camera, Inc. Microsoft and Windows are registered trademarks in the United States and
other countries of Microsoft Corporation. The official name of Windows is Microsoft Windows
Operating System. Pentium is a registered trademark of Intel Corporation. Apple, the Apple logo,
Macintosh, Power Macintosh, Mac OS and the Mac OS logo are registered trademarks of Apple
Computer, Inc. All other brand and product names are are trademarks or registered trademarks
of their respective owners.
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ADVANCED SETUP
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1AG6P1P1616-Printed in Germany
2.3
9222-7300-11 P-B308/KME-0311