HP Officejet Pro 8725 Printer Setup and Installation for MAC OS X: Insert the HP installation Drive onto the CD Drive of your Computer and follow the Automatic Setup onscreen instructions to complete the HP Printer Software installation. Breeze through multipage documents with two-sided scanning and a 50-page. HP OfficeJet Pro 8725 All-in-One Printer. HP Web Jetadmin; Embedded Web Server; HP Utility (Mac); HP JetAdvantage. Gmail app for mac 2015.
Using a USB legacy scanner for Mac OS X can be accomplished with based on the for *NIXes. I have the TWAIN program working with my scanjet 5470c and have disabled all others in the SANe preferences (not east to find for a non mac-user). It will scan fine with 75dpi, but if I try to scan at a higher resolution, it just zooms in on a smaller section of the scan surface. Thus, if I try to scan at 150, it will only allow me to see a maximum of 1/4 of my page.
If I scan at 300, only 1/8. I can still crop areas as usual on the higher dpi, but it is cropped from the 1/4 screen. Any help would be greatly appreciated. I have a MacBook Pro running Snow Leopard and have an HP 5470c that I’ve been trying to get to work consistently. The HP Scan utility works VERY sporatically.
I stumbled on your post and solution, and have been attempting to get it up and running. When I tried to install the SANE-BACKENDS-10.6.SDK, I get an error message which states: “sane-backends-10.6.sdk can’t be installed on this computer. Please install the Mac OS X 10.6 SDK package before installing the sane-backends 10.6 SDK package” When I try to search for a basic ‘Mac OS X 10.6 SDK package’, I have no luck finding one. Can you suggest a solution? Will this solution work without the SANE-BACKENDS installed? My HP Scanjet 5370c I carried over from my old PC days, and I’ve had it successfully linked to my 2003 eMac through the OS 9 driver download HP provides.
(My particular model of eMac being one that supports OS 9). Since the new Intel-chipped Macs arrived though, along with OS X 10.5 and above, I’ve had ZERO luck in finding anything that will connect the Scanjet to the newer OS versions Apple has released. My solution ultimately was to take the Snow Leopard-equipped MacBook Pro I had, and through Bootcamp, create a partition on the HD for Windows XP. Now I can connect to pretty much anything for a peripheral device made in the last 10 years with no problem. Only drawbacks? I have to take 20 seconds to reboot into OS X after scanning, and retrieve the images from the XP partition – that, and using Windows but other than those two issues, Simple.
Guys like you really make the world a better place, TJ. I’ll try to figure out my way through the installation process (i’m no expert on the subject and I have S.Leopard), but in the mean time I’d like to say I’m glad you all exist. You relieve all of us (the rest of the globe population, or at least the ones that are able to find your developments and use them) of the feeling that these greedy companies own us entirely and will suck us dry to our last drop of blood. But it isn’t just thatThese scanners were all bought 10 ys ago or less, and a lot of them are in general good shape.
Windows 7 for mac 2015 download. You are blessed for preventing us from trashing them away just because of some (intentional) gap in copyrighted software. That is a serious green enterprise!!!
I have Windows 2000 runing virtual on my PowerMac G5 and it’s perfect. I run the HP scanjet 5470c there also, because there was no drivers for Mac. But then I so this page and whant to try it on the Mac native instead. I have as a told you, HP Scanjet 5470c and Mac OS X 10.5.8 Leopard on a PowerMac G5 Quad Core 2.5GHz. I’ve done all the installation as told and in right order and then I did the settings in the preference also. Then I restart my Mac.