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To find out more information about TillManager and which version is right for you please Click Here TillManager also allows you to communicate with electronic cash registers locally and remotely, using a modem or the internet. Your name. Email address. Why Us? Developer's Description By Casio. Full Specifications. What's new in version 3. Release August 26, Date Added November 14, Version 3. Operating Systems. Total Downloads Downloads Last Week 3.

Report Software. Related Software. Microsoft Webcam Pro Free. Image driver. EOS Utility Free. Transfer images from your EOS camera to your computer. Remember how frustrated you were when you last used a product so badly thought out that you wondered if you and the designers were natives of the same planet? If not, may I recommend the Casio QV? I can guarantee you'll be left wondering about the possibility of alien life forms and their potential role in consumer electronics design on Planet Earth.

The basic design concept of the Casio QV isn't bad; in fact, it's brilliant. But some boneheaded tradeoffs in the implementation along with some really sloppy software design combine to make the QV a really weak product.

If you'd like to go read the official Casio description of this camera, just follow the link. I should point out right here that no digital camera can compete with its film-based counterparts in terms of image quality.

That said, the currently-available set of digital cameras remain eminently useful for electronic illustrations such as those commonly found on the Web. If photography is your reason for publishing on the Web, you'll obviously want to use a more traditional method of image transfer, like Photo CD, but for simple illustrations requiring rapid turnaround time, digital cameras can be hard to beat.

Note: All of the inline images in this review are reduced; click on the image to see the full-size version. The QV is about the size and weight of a small 35mm snapshot camera. One look at the back of the camera, however, tells you that it's not one of those little snapshot cameras.

Instead of a viewfinder, there's a small 1. If you've seen Sharp's ViewCam camcorder, you've seen the concept before; this is smaller and lighter, though, since there's really nothing mechanical inside. The viewfinder works quite well in most situations; it is, however, virtually unusable when the camera is outside in bright sunlight. Unlike a 35mm camera, there's no prominent image lens on this camera. That little section swivels through degrees of travel, so you can even do a self-portrait if you're so inclined.

Here's one place you can find an example of what's right with this camera: when you've got the lens flipped around so it's facing you, the LCD image is a left-to-right mirror image of the camera's actual view. This makes composing the picture easier since the image moves as expected when you move.

But when you capture the image, the correct non-mirror-image view gets stored. Images are captured by pressing a "shutter button," just as on a conventional camera. But the shutter is electronic, so there's no noise at all when you take the picture; the only indication you see is the word "WAIT" in the middle of the viewfinder screen for a few seconds while the image is stored to the camera's flash RAM.

The camera has 2 megabytes of flash RAM, enough for storage of 96 images. The effect of these controls is immediately visible on the LCD screen.

The lens also has two mechanical aperture settings: F2 and F8. The lens is fixed focus; everything beyond 60cm at F2 28cm at F8 is in focus. A macro setting is available; when active, the lens is set to focus on objects about 14cm away again, of course, depth of field at F8 increases the acceptable focus range. The camera takes four AA batteries.

A fresh set of alkaline batteries should last you about two hours, says the manual. My experience suggests that that two hours is measured on the alien planet I spoke of earlier; on Planet Earth, you'll have about one hour before you see the "low battery" indicator come on.

And you'd better heed that indicator when it comes on more about this later. Under a little hatch on the top of the camera are three jacks. One connects the camera to a computer; another carries a video signal to a monitor, VCR, or video printer. The third and final jack is a 6-volt power input, which helps tame the camera's voracious appetite for batteries somewhat.

By sliding a switch on the back of the camera from "record" to "play," you can use the monitor on the back of the camera to review the images you've stored. The image on the camera-back monitor is also also sent as NTSC composite video if you have the video cable connected.

Here's an image grabbed from this digital output the object in the photo is a digital pager. The number shown in the upper right-hand corner is the "page number" in the camera photographers would call this the frame number ; the camera's "DISP" button will show or hide this number. There's a "MODE" button on the top of the camera which can be used to display four pictures at once in a two-by-two grid, or nine pictures at once in a three-by-three grid pictured here.



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