MicroTek scanner drivers hose your boot drive!

Hoping an actual Apple person will read this and tell me how this should be handled. I've actually solved the problem with my own Mac, now I want to make sure the root cause is dealt with appropriately.

There is a hardware vendor, MicroTek, who makes scanners. I have one, model i700. The scanners seem to be good hardware with good features, but the software leaves lots to be desired--it's clunky, very un-Maclike, and fragile. Any minor problem or upgrade requires a ponderous cleanup of old files spread all over the system and a full reinstall.

I was hoping their latest software would improve things, so I downloaded version 7.61 from their website and did an install. Towards the end, when it was installing plug-ins (for PhotoShop, etc. I presume) my MacBook Pro gradually stopped responding and eventually ground to a halt. After waiting a long, long time for it to recover, I did a hard reset. Upon startup it just stuck at the grey screen with the spinning gear. Did some troubleshooting and couldn't recover, and since it was pretty similar to many a disk crash I've had, and AppleCare agreed, I sent it in for a new HD.

Since I still needed to do some scanning, I whipped out my backup PowerBook G4 and tried installing the same drivers. Boom. Same behavior. Now I have two dead machines, and it's pretty clear that the problem with the first one was NOT a bad drive after all but a driver install screwing up the OS. I reinstalled this Mac from scratch and tried again. Same thing. After a discussion with an incredulous support tech at MicroTek who was adamant that their software installer could do no such thing (and who eventually hung up on me), I did a search on these very forums and found a post from someone who had hosed their Mac by resetting permissions on their root filesystem.

So, I booted the Mac into single user mode (which worked) and checked out the filesystem. Sure enough--the entire directory tree from the root all the way down to the ScanMaker folder under Applications was set to the wrong owner, and permissions of 700, making the Mac incapable of accessing itself in order to boot. I fixed these up, and blam, it now boots fine. This behavior is reproducible every time. I've done it 5 or 6 times now on multiple Macs.

My question is this--how do I get the vendor to fix this problem? I've gotten around it myself, but this is a huge deal--anyone installing this thing is going to hose their boot volume and NOBODY is going to know how to fix it when it happens. Can Apple sanction these guys somehow, or do I need to slashdot them to embarrass them into it, or what?

Thanks for your input...

/mike

MacBook Pro, Mac OS X (10.5.5)

Posted on Nov 19, 2008 3:04 PM

Reply
11 replies

Nov 19, 2008 3:23 PM in response to Kappy

Kappy wrote:
Contact the vendor's tech support.


Please read my whole post, you'll see I did this. They're stonewalling. As a software executive I care a ton about software quality and customer service, and these guys I think are lacking in both areas. I want to see them do the right thing, not just because I'm p*ssed they wasted several days of my time while I was without my primary machine, but so that maybe they understand a bit better that it matters.

Kappy wrote:
You might also look for third-party drivers or check out VueScan which supports a myriad of scanners. Perhaps it supports your model.


Wow, never heard of that before, and my scanner's on the list. Thanks a bunch, I'll give it a shot.

/mike

Dec 11, 2008 4:56 AM in response to Mike Mitchell4

Thanks for this post. I've just experienced exactly the same thing on a 10.5.4 build when installing the sw5 7610eu.dmg driver. Had to reinstall completely- if only Microtek actually tested their software.

On their driver download page it states it supports 10.5 but the readme in the install files says it supports up to 10.4.. I took a gamble and failed miserably.

Seems there are two drivers out there:
the one I tried from European download page- sw5 7610eu.dmg ( http://ww3.microtek.com.tw/eu/modules/tinyd0/index.php?id=2)
and one I found via google- drv sw5_v7_61ad.dmg ( http://support.microtek.com/downloads/drvspecific.phtml?cnntn=c&x=11&y=8&slctos=17&step=2&prod=286&bymdlnme=1&drvgrp=763)

Has anyone tried the second driver. I really don't want to give it a go unless I know for sure it won't mess the machine up again

Dec 29, 2008 8:07 PM in response to Mike Mitchell4

Same thing happened to me - after waiting almost a year for Microtek to update its software so I could use my scanner again, the installation hung and completely hosed my system. Luckily, before restarting I noticed that my hard drive had the international red slash "NO" through it, so at least I knew the problem was probably permission related.

Disk utility refused to even try to repair permissions (the underlying operation quit), and I was not completely comfortable with manually resetting the permissions in single-user mode. I was able to start up in target disk mode, and confirmed that my root (hard drive) permissions were set to Everyone->No access. I changed this to Everyone->Read Only and did NOT copy that to the enclosing folders. I figured this was reasonably safe, and did not require my knowing what all the permissions should be set to. I then restarted from the install disk and ran disk utility, and sure enough, it now had enough access to repair the rest of the permissions itself.

As for you larger question, publicize. I liked my scanner (Microtek ScanMaker 6000), but after a) waiting a year for a simple driver upgrade and then b) having that driver installation fail so catastrophically, I won't be buying any Microtek products any time soon (for home or work). And I certainly won't recommend Microtek scanners to anyone (unless I really don't like them).

Jan 14, 2009 6:44 PM in response to Mike Mitchell4

I agree. I had the same thing happen to me. I, also, noticed the red bar symbol on the hard drive in the last moments before the crash, which put me on the right track. But it still cost me two nights of sweat and tears to work it out! Then I found this thread ...

I sent a polite message to Microtek, explaining what happened to me, pointing to this discussion thread and asking if they have plans any to fix their software.

At this stage, I still have an inoperable i800 scanner. Thanks for the suggestions re drivers.

Oh, and I haven't had the courtesy of a response ...

Jan 16, 2009 8:40 AM in response to Mike Mitchell4

I have just attempted to install the 7.61 drivers again. Thinking I would need to fix permissions in the messy way described.

I had a quick read of the readme file prior to the install and noticed something.

to quote:
"1. This version of ScanWizard 5 works on Macintosh PowerPC, running under Mac OS X version 10.3 or later *installed on HFS+ (Mac OS Extended) file system volume*; UFS (Unix File System) file system volume is not supported."

The first time I had installed it it was on a volume formatted with Mac OS Extended (Journaled). The symptoms were as described in this post.

This time round I installed it on volume which was not Journaled and it installed without any issues.

note I was logged in as admin (user accounts reside on another volume which is journaled)


Hope this works for you...

I installed the driver found on the US website:
ftp://microtek:microtek@files165.cyberlynk.net/microtek/macfiles/drvsw5_v7_61ad.dmg

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MicroTek scanner drivers hose your boot drive!

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