Genuine Toshiba owner's manual. Couldn't really ask for more. And written in understandable English in contrast to a few recent experiences I have had with manuals for other equipment other than Toshiba but made in China and written in "Chinglish"!
I purchased a vintage Sony mixer off eBay and within the hour was able to locate and purchase the manual for it.I mean really,where else can you find a manual for a product made in 1983!? It was easy to find and purchase/download the manual I needed.I will use this site again for other equipment I have! Great site!
It`s full copy of a service manual from url http://www.philips.owner-manuals.com/PM3216-service-manual-PHILIPS.html
Text excerpt from page 116 (click to view)
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Acquiring One Image from the Camera
You are now ready to acquire an image into Photoshop. Acquiring an image copies its image data from the PCMCIA card into Photoshop, where the acquired image opens into a Photoshop window. The original image is unchanged by the process. 1. With an image selected, click the ACQUIRE button. (You can also double-click the image as an alternate to the two-step process of selecting one image and then clicking the ACQUIRE button.)
2. Wait as a progress box appears; you remain in the driver as the image opens into a Photoshop window behind the driver image window. (You can cancel acquiring by clicking the CANCEL button in the progress box.) 3. (Optional) Click the DONE button to close the driver image window.
4. (Optional) Edit the acquired image using Photoshop features. Save the image to your computer hard disk (you cannot save it back to the PCMCIA card in the camera) in the file format of your choice.
IMPORTANT: If you have not made any changes to the acquired image while in Photoshop, and you click the close box of the acquired image window or choose CLOSE from the Photoshop FILE menu or quit Photoshop, the window will close without asking you if you want to save it. Therefore, be sure you save any acquired images you do not want to lose before closing their windows or quitting Photoshop.