A:AnswerIt does! I just scanned a few hundred of my mom's old slides from the 60s and 70s. The whole thing took me a couple of hours and that's including adjusting colors and switching trays for the different slide sizes. If I didn't have two different slide thicknesses, it would have been quicker because you can just feed one after another of the thin paper slides without pulling the tray out to switch slides. Using the thick plastic cases was much more effort because I had to change the tray and they were just too thick to work like it should have. The paper slides worked the best, but I'd had to clean and remount quite a few of them due to mouse droppings and stuff on the cardboard, and the plastic mounts I'd been able to find to replace the cardboard mounts weren't Kodak. They still worked very well in the scanner though. I'm very happy with this product!
A:AnswerI saw a review of this unit a few weeks ago that said they were not able to connect to a Mac.
I have not been able to see the scanner on my Macbook.
A:AnswerI was able to fiddle around with things and make adjustments that I was rather impressed with. Several of my mom's old 2x2 slides had faded or just weren't that great to begin with and I was able to adjust the color and brightness. I'll attach a couple of examples. The red one was only visible as half a slide until I adjusted the color in the scanner and was actually able to see what was under the red splotch!
A:AnswerI have not tried it, but I think it can because it appears the opening to the slide groove is large enough... Sorry this is the best I can give you.
A:AnswerIt would have to be developed to use for anything - slide, print, scan, ...
Think of this as a special format of a regular computer flatbed scanner. It does not magic, it just makes it convenient
A:AnswerIs the stereo slide as wide and as thick as a regular 35mm slide? Yes it will work, because the width fits and the length is longer and can be slide through.
If Larger than a normal slide, then No., take it to a camera store for digital processing.