Review of FingerPrint GSi.....by Tracy Poe Apple II Hardware Forum Leader - America Online Gadget-hungry IIgs owners will find this one hard to pass up: a card that will grab screen images, print them, save them, crop them, rotate them, flip them horizontally and vertically, and still have room enough for a calendar and calculator! The FingerPrint GSi does all of the aforementioned, and with an ease that's breathtaking. Some of the most obvious applications are in education, but all types of Apple graphic artists will find a use for the FingerPrint GSi. The FingerPrint GSi is a graphic utility card that lets you freeze any program at the touch of a button and capture any image from the screen of your computer and manipulate it or load it into your favorite paint or drawing program so that you can create banners, or use any image in your desktop publishing program. The simple grabbing of frames isn't special part, though. Most frames found in GS programs are found in files on disk, and can be imported into regular GS paint programs with little difficulty. The trick is in what the FingerPrint GSi does beyond frame grabbing. Say, for instance, that you want to grab the opening screen of Mean 18, but all you want to print is the little gopher. The FingerPrint GSi will let you isolate on the gopher, and then expand that small portion of the frame to fill a page on your printer. Likewise, you can crop only the title "MEAN 18," turn it sideways, and make a banner several sheets long. These are relatively trivial examples, but should serve to get you thinking about the possibilities of this card. For all the things the FingerPrint GSi does, there is one thing that it doesn't do - act as a printer interface. It merely controls the output of your existing printer/interface combination. The FingerPrint GSi prints to most available printers, and even to a few that System 5.0 can't handle. Some rather striking banners were created by Thirdware (FingerPrint's parent company) for AppleFest/Boston, using a Hewlett-Packard PaintJet printer. The colors in the banners were highly saturated and created a very strong effect. Most users will connect via the GS printer port, but those who want to use the more esoteric printers may need FingerPrint's Serial or Parallel cards. One benefit of the FingerPrint GSi is the use of these "non-standard" printers with your paint programs. Load your image into your paint program, switch to full screen image, grab the screen with the FingerPrint GSi and print! Disk functions are easy to handle with the FingerPrint GSi. From the disk functions menu, you can catalog a directory, save a grabbed screen ($C1 format for SHR - you can also save DHR, Hi-Res and Lo-Res screens. You can even save screens from ProDOS applications in DOS 3.3 format and vice versa.), load screens into memory, rename, delete, lock and unlock files, and check available disk space. The documentation that comes with the FingerPrint GSi is higher quality than average. It fully explains how to install the card and set dip switches to configure for your printer/interface combination. The card is recommended for slot 3, but it can go in any slot. The card merely takes power from the slot, and so doesn't need to be declared to the GS control panel. Each of the menu options is explained thoroughly, but the tutorial section could use a bit better explanations. That's the only drawback to the docs, and I consider it minor. The FingerPrint GSi is very easy to use. A small mylar button peeks out from under the hood of the GS. The activating mechanism is mysterious, because no click or other physiological feedback is received. When you come off of the button, however, the FingerPrint GSi swings into motion. Even if the frame you want is displayed in the middle of a load sequence, everything freezes, and the FingerPrint GSi routines take over. You can print the screen directly, or you can use any of the printing options available, such as cropping, rotating, etc. You can even "Flip" the image, which is useful for making T-Shirt transfers. You have to have a special ribbon for those, however. One feature is extremely unique. You can take a screen image and blow it up to wall size. FingerPrint GSi handles it this way: It prints "strips", and somehow keeps track of how much of the complete image it has printed per strip. It prints alignment marks at certain intervals so your strips register properly. This is a very cheap way to make your own wallpaper! Now if I could only find a cheap paper hanger..... When you've completed your tasks, a simple mouse click or ESCape takes you back to what you were doing. In my case, after I had finished playing with the Mean 18 opening screen, I gave the command to the FingerPrint GSi to resume, and it continued loading, right from where it was interrupted. Just to make sure no hanky-panky had taken place in the interim, I played a round of Mean 18, and there were no problems whatsoever. The FingerPrint GSi is available for about $75 or so from mail order outlets. It comes with a Slide Show demo program, and the documentation even tells you you can make as many copies as you want of the Slide Show. Just don't try to sell it, and make sure the Thirdware copyright notice remains intact. It's an excellent value for those who deal with computer graphics frequently, and it's a fun gadget for those who only dabble.