you need to purchase either a film scanner or a flatbed scanner. the film camera will scan negatives and some i believe are able to scan slides as well. Should you only have pictures and not have the negatives you would be looking for a flatbed scanner. I cant recommend any particular ones as I have only recently gotten back into film and have not gotten to the point that I want to scan my own film yet. Just not there yet.
I'm usually a do-it-yourself kind of guy. Heck, I still change my own engine oil. For scanning, though, I say ship them off and have someone else deal with it. Let someone like ScanCafe (not an endorsement, just mentioning them as someone in the field) do all the work. It may be cheaper to buy your own equipment, but it is just too darned much work for me.
If you have/can get your hands on a slide projector- I set up my DSLR to take a picture of the slide projected on a blank wall. I had it on the tripod with manual settings for the projection. Snap a pic, advance the slide, snap a pic, advance... I could go through a whole roll in 10 minutes.
I have the adapter for my HP scanner- deathly slow process!
In terms of dollars, yes. But time is valuable too. Scanning slides and negatives -- doing it well -- is very time-consuming and tedious, to say nothing of the post-processing that is usually required.Thank you! I will be looking closely at one of these for slides Bob and maybe shipping off the pics to get it done elsewhere.
I did find one place that will make a CD of your slides for .30 per slide......but it may be cheaper to do it myself.