Virtual XP in Win 7: Firewire

reo

New member
Will it offer firewire support so I can run my Nikon scanner?

Thanks!

Reo
 

My Computer

OS
vista x64
Yeah, I'm wondering that, too - I've got a Nikon Coolscan ED4000. Here's hoping.

Mary
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
self-built
OS
Windows 7x64 + XP Mode
CPU
i7-740
Motherboard
Asus P6T Deluxe
Memory
12 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire Radeon HD 4870
Sound Card
on board
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo 30" CG301; Dell 20" 2007FP,
Screen Resolution
Eizo: 2560x1600; Dell: 1600x1024
Hard Drives
3 x WD Velociraptors, 320 GB
2 x Seagate Barracuda 1.5 GB
PSU
Zalman ZM850
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Coolermaster ATCS 840
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Swiftech H20-220 watercooling kit
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Logitech G11
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Logitech cordless
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I saw nothing about it.

Sharing Firewire with a virtualMachine is not common. It don't think that virtualPC can do that (is there Any VM which can do ?)
 

My Computer

OS
Vista H.P. SP1 x32 Seven RC x64
CPU
Q6600 @ 3.4Ghz
Motherboard
GA-EP45-DS3L
Memory
4Go PC2-6400
Graphics Card(s)
8500GT @ 700/500
Sound Card
Audigy Platinium
Monitor(s) Displays
Mitsubishi Diamond Pro 920 + Mitsubishi Diamond Pro 720
Screen Resolution
1600x1200 twice
Hard Drives
Hitachi 160Go
Maxtor 160Go (system drive)
Maxtor 200Go in Antec MX-1 EC external box (eSATA-USB2.0)
PSU
Corsair VX550W
Case
Thermaltake Xaser III
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Watercooling (CPU, GPU, HDD, NB)
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MS Wireless Multimedia 6000 V2.0
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IntellEye Explorer 3.0
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ADSL 18Mbit/s/1Mbit/s
From what I've gathered, and to answer my own question, I'm pretty sure the answer is no. Firewire is Apple proprietary and it's not available in any VM product.

Reo
 

My Computer

OS
vista x64
Virtual XP in Win 7: Firewire

Reo

I believe I've got good news about running a Nikon Coolscan ED4000 to run in W7 x64.

I found Bob Johnson's website, and a page called 'Getting a Nikon Scanner to Run on 64-bit Vista'. It's at:


Getting a Nikon Scanner to Run on 64-bit Vista - Photo Tips @ Earthbound Light

I followed his instructions exactly: downloaded NikonScan 4.03 for Vista x86, and installed it in compatibility mode in Windows 7 x64, using 'Vista SP 2' as the OS it had worked in.

Then I copied/pasted his 'scanners.inf' file (on his webpage), and put it and 'NKScnUSD.dll' in a new folder. NB: He says you find the .dll in "C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Nikon\Driver\Scan1394", but mine was empty. It was in "C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Nikon\Driver\ScanUSB".

I turned on the NikonScan, opened Device Manager (the Nikon Scan was listed, if I remember right, under 'Other Devices' - it's now under Imaging Devices, so I can't be sure of the exact name), and followed his instructions about installing the drivers from my new folder.

It worked. I've just scanned a slide - in Windows 7 x64!

(I also found a workaround that involves installing a program called Vuescan, copying 1 driver, and uninstalling - it's at Manual Focus Forum / Nikon Coolscan Scanner and Vista 64. But Bob Johnson's workaround seems simpler.

Hope this works for you.

Mary
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
self-built
OS
Windows 7x64 + XP Mode
CPU
i7-740
Motherboard
Asus P6T Deluxe
Memory
12 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire Radeon HD 4870
Sound Card
on board
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo 30" CG301; Dell 20" 2007FP,
Screen Resolution
Eizo: 2560x1600; Dell: 1600x1024
Hard Drives
3 x WD Velociraptors, 320 GB
2 x Seagate Barracuda 1.5 GB
PSU
Zalman ZM850
Case
Coolermaster ATCS 840
Cooling
Swiftech H20-220 watercooling kit
Keyboard
Logitech G11
Mouse
Logitech cordless
Internet Speed
slow broadband
Thanks for the info. I'll give it a try. That would be great news!

Reo
 

My Computer

OS
vista x64
Yeah!

Mary,

Thanks so much! It works!

Once last thing and I think I can leave XP behind (with no bad feelings): Palm Tungsten E. The last I checked they didn't have a 64 bit driver.
 

My Computer

OS
vista x64
My scanner now appears to be trashed. It worked once this morning, and I tried again and it returns a hardware error message and the power button flashes after I power up. I tried it on my XP OS too. This is the same issue I had the scanner was repaired and I don't think I've used since I tested it when I got it back.

Oops, never mind, the film holder wasn't pushed in all the way....it's OK again.

Thanks again!

Reid
 

My Computer

OS
vista x64
From what I've gathered, and to answer my own question, I'm pretty sure the answer is no. Firewire is Apple proprietary and it's not available in any VM product.

Reo

Oh Dear -- Firewire is NOT apple proprietary. I use it on a CANON PRO DSLR . It's an IEEE 1394 standard. Apple have a product but thats different.

IEEE 1394 interface - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I've had no probs with running a Windows XP virtual machine under vmware with the Canon software.

Note you'll need to ensure the IEEE 1394 standard works on the Host machine as well so you can cattach the device to the VM.


Try installing your Nikon software under the XP mode virtual machine. In theory it should work -- I haven't yet tried loading my Canon software under XP mode yet as I'm still using a separate XP VM machine for this.

Cheers
jimbo
 

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PC/Desktop
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Custom built, several laptops HP/ASUS
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Linux CENTOS 7 / various Windows OS'es and servers
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Intel i7 Intel i5
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8GB, 16GB
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On Motherboard
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Realtek HD audio
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Apple Cinema display, Samsung LCD
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1920 X 1080
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4 X 1TB SATA
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Oh Dear -- Firewire is NOT apple proprietary. I use it on a CANON PRO DSLR . It's an IEEE 1394 standard. Apple have a product but thats different.

IEEE 1394 interface - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

It's not only Apple proprietary:

However, the royalty which Apple Inc. and other patent holders initially demanded from users of FireWire (US$0.25 per end-user system)
(From the Wikipedia Article you give ;) )

firewire is not free for use, Apple (and other) take money on it

It was initiated by Apple and developed by the IEEE P1394 Working Group, largely driven by contributions from Apple
(again)
 

My Computer

OS
Vista H.P. SP1 x32 Seven RC x64
CPU
Q6600 @ 3.4Ghz
Motherboard
GA-EP45-DS3L
Memory
4Go PC2-6400
Graphics Card(s)
8500GT @ 700/500
Sound Card
Audigy Platinium
Monitor(s) Displays
Mitsubishi Diamond Pro 920 + Mitsubishi Diamond Pro 720
Screen Resolution
1600x1200 twice
Hard Drives
Hitachi 160Go
Maxtor 160Go (system drive)
Maxtor 200Go in Antec MX-1 EC external box (eSATA-USB2.0)
PSU
Corsair VX550W
Case
Thermaltake Xaser III
Cooling
Watercooling (CPU, GPU, HDD, NB)
Keyboard
MS Wireless Multimedia 6000 V2.0
Mouse
IntellEye Explorer 3.0
Internet Speed
ADSL 18Mbit/s/1Mbit/s
you left out some of the quote
"However, the royalty which Apple and other patent holders initially demanded from users of Fire Wire (US$0.25 per end-user system) and the more expensive hardware needed to implement it (US$1–$2), both of which have since been dropped" the term have been dropped means it is free.
IEEE 1394 is NOT proprietary by definition. The definition of proprietary is "ONE that possesses, owns, or holds EXCLUSIVE right to something"
Apple, Texas Instruments, Sony, Digital Equipment Corporation, IBM, and STMicroelectronics all share the patent, and therefore is not proprietary.
 

My Computer

OS
me xp vista
Really Dumb Question

Reo

I believe I've got good news about running a Nikon Coolscan ED4000 to run in W7 x64.

I found Bob Johnson's website, and a page called 'Getting a Nikon Scanner to Run on 64-bit Vista'. It's at:


Getting a Nikon Scanner to Run on 64-bit Vista - Photo Tips @ Earthbound Light

I followed his instructions exactly: downloaded NikonScan 4.03 for Vista x86, and installed it in compatibility mode in Windows 7 x64, using 'Vista SP 2' as the OS it had worked in.

Then I copied/pasted his 'scanners.inf' file (on his webpage), and put it and 'NKScnUSD.dll' in a new folder. NB: He says you find the .dll in "C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Nikon\Driver\Scan1394", but mine was empty. It was in "C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Nikon\Driver\ScanUSB".

I turned on the NikonScan, opened Device Manager (the Nikon Scan was listed, if I remember right, under 'Other Devices' - it's now under Imaging Devices, so I can't be sure of the exact name), and followed his instructions about installing the drivers from my new folder.

It worked. I've just scanned a slide - in Windows 7 x64!

(I also found a workaround that involves installing a program called Vuescan, copying 1 driver, and uninstalling - it's at Manual Focus Forum / Nikon Coolscan Scanner and Vista 64. But Bob Johnson's workaround seems simpler.

Hope this works for you.

Mary

I thought I was going to have to trash my Nikon 4000 ED! I am very anxious to see if this solution works for me but I don't know how to "copy/paste" Johnson's "scanners.inf" file and wind up with a functioning file. Is there a way to save it as an .inf file?

Sorry to be so obtuse.

Gerry
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell i545
OS
Win 7 64bit
Hi Gerry


* You're not obtuse at all. I've just installed the retail of Windows 7, so I had to reinstall the Nikon Scan workaround. I'd made notes of what I'd done in the W7 beta, but even so, I had to keep double-checking them.


>>I don't know how to "copy/paste" Johnson's "scanners.inf" file and wind up with a functioning file. Is there a way to save it as an .inf file?



The easiest thing is to go to the website, Getting a Nikon Scanner to Run on 64-bit Vista - Photo Tips @ Earthbound Light. The scanners.inf file is halfway down the page, in a box. Select everything in the box, beginning with:


;========================= Begin of scanners.inf ===============================


- down to and including the line:
;========================= End of scanners.inf ===============================


Copy it with Ctrl C, open Notepad, paste it with Ctrl V, save it as 'scanners.inf'. Then copy it to the relevant folder.


* NB: In May when I posted, I said that I found the *file 'NKScnUSD.dll' in:

"C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Nikon\Driver\ScanUSB", not in*"C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Nikon\Driver\Scan1394".

This time, when reinstalling, I did find it in the....\Scan1394 folder. So you may find it in either place. Wherever you find it, copy it to the same folder as 'scanners.inf'.


My folder, FWIW, is called 'C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Nikon\Windows 7 workaround'. But it could be called anything you want, as long as it's a subfolder of C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Nikon.



If this message is too bitty to follow, let me know and I'll re-post the whole procedure, revised.


Best wishes


Mary
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
self-built
OS
Windows 7x64 + XP Mode
CPU
i7-740
Motherboard
Asus P6T Deluxe
Memory
12 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire Radeon HD 4870
Sound Card
on board
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo 30" CG301; Dell 20" 2007FP,
Screen Resolution
Eizo: 2560x1600; Dell: 1600x1024
Hard Drives
3 x WD Velociraptors, 320 GB
2 x Seagate Barracuda 1.5 GB
PSU
Zalman ZM850
Case
Coolermaster ATCS 840
Cooling
Swiftech H20-220 watercooling kit
Keyboard
Logitech G11
Mouse
Logitech cordless
Internet Speed
slow broadband
Ashley

Was this after you'd worked through the workaround?

I found that if I turned on the NikonScan, pre workaround, it showed up as 'Other Devices' in Device Manager. After doing the workaround, it turned up in Imaging Devices.

Most importantly, after I'd done the workaround, the NikonScan software icon appeared on my desktop, and I could scan negs and slides.

Can you give more detail of what you've done?

Mary
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
self-built
OS
Windows 7x64 + XP Mode
CPU
i7-740
Motherboard
Asus P6T Deluxe
Memory
12 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire Radeon HD 4870
Sound Card
on board
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo 30" CG301; Dell 20" 2007FP,
Screen Resolution
Eizo: 2560x1600; Dell: 1600x1024
Hard Drives
3 x WD Velociraptors, 320 GB
2 x Seagate Barracuda 1.5 GB
PSU
Zalman ZM850
Case
Coolermaster ATCS 840
Cooling
Swiftech H20-220 watercooling kit
Keyboard
Logitech G11
Mouse
Logitech cordless
Internet Speed
slow broadband
Thanks for saving my Nikon 4000 ED Scanner, Mary

After my first post to you, I decided to try downloading the scanners file from Bob Johnson's site. Since it was an htm file I was not certain what to do with it. Ultimately, though I am not sure this was necessary, I just changed the suffix to "ini" and it worked fine (in conjuntion with Johnson's procedure as futher elucidated by your comments).

I have scanned a few slides without a hitch -- Hooray! In fact, I am thinking this configuration may be more stable than was the case with my aging xp system on which my Nikon scanner was a bit cantankerous at times.

I had upgraded to the "professional' version of Win 7-64 on my new computer hoping there would be some way to run the scanner in the xp virtualization mode but from what I see posted, the firewire option is not there. Thus, the solution worked out by you and others (without help from Nikon) is a godsend. THANKS!

Gerry
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell i545
OS
Win 7 64bit
Gerry

>>I just changed the suffix to "ini" and it worked fine<<

It should actually be 'inf' not 'ini', but if it works for you...

Best

Mary
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
self-built
OS
Windows 7x64 + XP Mode
CPU
i7-740
Motherboard
Asus P6T Deluxe
Memory
12 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire Radeon HD 4870
Sound Card
on board
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo 30" CG301; Dell 20" 2007FP,
Screen Resolution
Eizo: 2560x1600; Dell: 1600x1024
Hard Drives
3 x WD Velociraptors, 320 GB
2 x Seagate Barracuda 1.5 GB
PSU
Zalman ZM850
Case
Coolermaster ATCS 840
Cooling
Swiftech H20-220 watercooling kit
Keyboard
Logitech G11
Mouse
Logitech cordless
Internet Speed
slow broadband
More scanner woes

Mary,

Sorry, I meant "inf" not "ini". I told you I was obtuse. Unfortunately, after getting my Nikon 4000 ED scanner to work initially with Win 7, the computer no longer recognizes that it exists. I have come to the conclusion that the problem is the scanner itself rather than the OS or scanner software. As I mentioned earlier, I had been having the same kind of trouble intermittantly with my old computer running XP. And when I reunited the scanner and the old computer today they wanted nothing to do with each other. I tried different cables but that did not help. Although the scanner appears to initialize as it should, it does not seem to send a signal to the computer. I guess its time to "move on". Nevertheless, I still appreciate your efforts and that of the others who have figured out how to make at least a "working" Nikon scanner function under Win 7-64. I hope your scanner takes you to Windows 8 and beyond.

Best,

Gerry
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell i545
OS
Win 7 64bit
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