Thanks for the reply. I think those photos show an early system.
I recognised the 411 CDROM case right away as I have one, though mine only has a reader. I still have a few SSs but they're later models than what was shown there (5, 10 and 20) and yep all have 8-bit framebuffers. The power led on the front of the case means this would be a 1, 1+ or 2. The 10 has one too, but it also has the recess for the model badge beside it and there's none here.
Update: I've found a few articles covering the system around launch and they confirm it's a SS2.
I've done a bit more digging around on the Kodak site via The Wayback Machine and found links to some more info. The later/final systems were SS20-based. I've also seen a reference to a Kodak photo retouching system called Premier that also ran on Sparc. Not sure if it's part of this Photo CD system or another tool.
This page has some info for the PIW at the bottom. And
this software update document lists compatible hardware, including an SBUS CMYK accelerator card. Unfortunately I can't find a copy of the users guide mentioned at the end.
Update: From a feature in Popular Electronics (Feb 93):
Quote:The scanned image is sent to a Kodak PCD Data Manager S200 (which is a specially adapted Sun SPARCstation computer) where color correction and density correction are performed. The image is then compressed according to an algorithm proprietary to Kodak; the resulting file is about 4.5 megabytes. Some proprietary Kodak hardware is also contained in the S200.
The SPARCstation outputs to an index printer that produces the thumbnail index prints. Data is also fed to a Photo CD disc writer that is made by Philips. The disc writer records the pictures on a write-once CD, which is then given to the customer.