Archive for September, 2009

Fax machines were a staple of practically every office all over the world. Some businesses now find they can do without a fax machine, either getting rid of them all together, or combining them into a multifunction device which covers scanning, printing, copying and faxing all in one.

However, the ability to send identity or legal documents which prove the identity of a person or an agreement is invaluable to some businesses.

Estate agents and realtors have long been custodians of the fax machine, as they need to be able to quickly verify signings on the completion of the houses that they negotiate through to sale. Alongside them are the lawyer’s, solicitors and conveyance professionals who are involved in similar activities.

Recruitment consultancies also find use for fax machines, even above and beyond the scan and print method which has become so prevalent in the 21st century. This is due to data security legislation in various parts of the world. Their requirement to quickly access identity in agreement information has not changed.

Indeed it has actually increased with the change in border control in Europe, as each recruitment agent is now culpable if they mistakenly employ illegal immigrants. Thus their checks are more stringent than ever, and the fax machine is one of the tools in their arsenal. If a potential employee cannot fax the documentation through in a short amount of time, it is usually indicative of a problem.

But what if the candidate has not got a fax machine? The majority of ordinary people do not have a use for a faxing device on a regular basis. In this case, a visit to the local print shop or stationery supplies store will normally allow you to send a fax for under a dollar, thereby providing fax services to practically everyone.

To see what is available to us in the world of faxing software, click here now.

With the advent of superfast DSL-based Internet connections, leased lines and DVD-ROMs, you would think that there is little room for the humble fax machine any more.

Thousands of documents can be compressed onto a USB stick. Hundreds of hours of video can be downloaded onto an array of hard drives in a matter of hours. DVD and Blue Ray discs can fit more graphics, text, sound and video on one disc than we ever thought was possible a few years ago.

Indeed there is a famous quote from Bill Gates where he thought “640k of memory should be enough for anybody”. And yet even the computer I write this upon has 4GB installed, around 75 times as much!

But in this world of high-tech, high capacity, high-speed content delivery systems, there is still a need to be able to access the images associated with paper-based documentation. All our technology has yet to eliminate the staple of how we identify ourselves in a legal manner: our signature.

And more often than not, it is this requirement, along with identification documents, that are needed when we fax. Contracts are written on paper and then signed in the presence of witnesses with a ballpoint pen. We may use a computer to type these contracts and we can even take pictures, but the purposes of acting in a legal capacity, a replica of the document and the signature is required.

Faxes provided the way to transmit and receive replicas of contracts, passports, driver’s licenses and other official signed documentation at high speed. Its installation all over the world will take some time to die out, it ever does. Consider that we have had VoIP for over 10 years, yet telephones still persist.

I imagine faxes will not die out, but merely evolve, becoming the paper based front-end to our digital communication systems.

To see where we are in the world of faxing software, click here now.

A fax machine is the combination of an optical image scanner, a modulation / demodulation interface device (otherwise known as a modem), and a printer.

A piece of paper, or nowadays any item which could sit underneath the lid of a flatbed scanning device, is fed into the bay of the scanner. It is then either dragged over the imaging eye of the scanner or, if the scanner is a flatbed variety, the imaging eye will move over the document.

The scanner will help the fax machine encode the document into a data file which represents the position of any writing or markings on the document and its associated contrast.

The fax machine will then attempt to connect to the remote machine by way of a telephone number. The number, when dialled, will hopefully ring and if there is a fax machine on the other end, it will answer with the now very familiar carrier tone.

The carrier tone is an audio signal telling the fax machine that there is a fax presence on the other end of the line, and to change the settings to allow the most efficient transmission of data.

Once this carrier tone “greeting” period has passed, and the parameters for the transmission are established, the sending machine will feed the data file into the modulator. The modulator converts the data file into sound, compressing it and transmitting it through the phone line to the receiving fax machine. The receiving machine will then de-modulate and decompress the data file.

The fax machine then passes the data file to the printer, interpreting it so that it can reproduce the positions of any writing or markings on the received document, along with the required contrast settings.

Once the transmission has been completed, the receiving machine sends a confirmation signal to the transmitting machine, and both devices hang up, finishing the session.

If you would like to check out our comparison of what is available to us in the world of faxing software, click here now.

Who doesn’t use fax machines?

There are many people who do not use fax machines, and I myself would have, in times past, classed myself as one of these people.

Strangely enough, the people who don’t use fax machines are very much the same types of people who by my own definition would. You’ll find the very same types of secretaries, PAs and managers opposed to these clunky and archaic devices as you will those who think it’s is God’s gift to mankind.

It is a problem of generations and a condition of what time in history you may have been born in. In the middle of the 1990s, the Internet became a widespread phenomena in homes and businesses across the world. When this happened, anyone with an Internet connection and an imaging device could send a document anywhere in the world for almost no cost, at a ridiculously high speed and at a quality that would far surpasses the most expensive fax machine available on the face of the planet.

And so there are a group of people in business who think that the fax machine could be consigned to the history books. Yes, in the 1950s, 60s and 70s, the teleprinters and fax machines of the time were amazing devices, capable of sending a message across the world at high speed when a letter would take weeks, if not months. And even into the 80s, where faxes were still useful for sending signed documentation at high-speed, they could still seem to be something of a miracle as opposed to waiting for paperwork to arrive.

The question is when will businesses and the population as a whole give up on the beloved and embattled fax machine? It kind of bridges two worlds: the world of e-mail and instant messaging, and the world of paper-based postal services, binding them together with an easy interface.

And despite the people who don’t like it, until someone figures out how to do this in a computer to the same standard, fax machines will still be here.

If you want to check out our comparison of what is available to us in the world of faxing software, click here now.

Many people find a use for fax machines.

The typical user is anyone who works at or with an office in an administrative function. Anyone from a secretary to a PA to a manager to a director to an administrative assistant will be a potential user of a fax machine.

In addition, fax machines also find use in amongst members of the population who have a form of disability or physical impairment, not least of which are those who are hard of hearing. The fax machine grants them the ability to use telephone lines to send images and writing instead of speaking and listening, giving these users a similar level of communication freedom as everyone else.

A trend which has emerged over the last 10 to 15 years has been to use the fax machine as a marketing tool, sending fax broadcasts to businesses and offices where it might be known that there is some interest in a product or service that a particular company might be interested in marketing.

However, there is also, along with this upsurge in marketing, a trend to utilize fax mechanisms to distribute spam. Very similar to the e-mail counterpart that most of us are now familiar with in one way or another, fax spam is the unsolicited sending a fax broadcasts en masse.

Consequently the recipients of these broadcasts usually find themselves inundated with messages that they are effectively paying for in paper and ink.

Unfortunately, there is little that can be done if the sender does not wish to comply with the law. For instance, hosting the fax transmission service outside of the country can eliminate most of the legislation put in place to protect businesses from unsolicited direct marketing of this type.

To check out our comparison of what is available to us in the world of faxing software, click here now.

By P James.

With wireless hotspots growing in popularity and frequency, being sat in Costa whilst waiting for your appointment with the Bank Manager or a supplier, or being sat on a train for a couple of hours, or waiting at the airport for a flight, means that you can easily use your laptop to send that vital fax off and keep the wheels of business turning.

The use of faxing software means that you can actually remain in contact for what may have been a ‘lost’ time spent in commuting or waiting for appointments. With the internet modems now built into many business grade mobile phones, and the small notebook laptops and internet dongles that are becoming ever more popular for business people out and about, there are no further restrictions on communicating in any form.

You may be a sole trader with no office administration support, no “Person Friday” at the office that you can call to ask them to send the fax for the latest shipment off to the suppliers, oh and by the way, the deadline is in 5 minutes!

Even as a back up to when email systems are broken, or when a company may not have email systems in place as yet (believe me there are still a few out there!), having the capability and ability to send a fax message from your computer is a reliable back up when all other methods of communication are down!

To check out our comparison of what is available to us in the world of faxing software, click here now.

By P James.

Do you know where YOUR nearest fax machine is?

No – seriously – do you? A while ago I had to fax some information off to my mortgage provider, and the only way I could get the request to them in time, was to send them a fax message.

I didn’t have a fax machine as I didn’t run a business from home. I had no idea where to locate my nearest fax machine, in time before the close of play.

Eventually I found a post office counter a few miles away that did provide a faxing service, and I had to pay a tidy sum to get the 6 pages of information off to the mortgage company!

Later on, I was telling a friend about the situation, and she asked if I knew about faxing software that I could install onto my computer. I had to admit – I didn’t!

But since then it seems, everyone I know has had to send or receive a fax from one company or another, and now they’re using my fax software that I installed!

For example:
• A car insurance company wanted proof of a like for like quotation from another company that had to be faxed.
• A solicitor company required proof of ID be faxed over to them in the interim before an appointment.
• An employment agency requiring a fax of a P45.
• Mortgage company wanting a faxed copy of a letter that wouldn’t make the deadline if sent by traditional post.

By P James.

How mobile businesses can have full communication methods with faxing software.

You have a mobile businessman, either out on the road visiting existing clients or prospective customers, and the only ‘office’ you have is a desk at home, which you’re very rarely in, because you’re so busy out and about.

How in these situations can you be fully contactable? Some companies in certain sectors still prefer to communicate by fax. Emails can get lost within systems, and still there are a minority of companies who haven’t yet taken the leap into email.

It can cost from as little as $9 a month to have access to an internet faxing service, but what is the $9 actually giving you?

• Peace of mind for yourself that you are fully contactable at all times.
• Trust for your customers that you are easy to communicate with.
• A back up system showing you are adaptable and flexible.

That along with the fact that even if the worst happens, and your computer ‘dies’ whilst you are out on the road, your fax messages will still be there waiting for you – just like your email messages. As soon as you get access to another computer with internet access, you can log in to see your fax messages – and then respond, even if just to say that you’ll respond properly with any information required when your computer is fixed.

With so much equipment to carry with us these days, making full use of your already existing laptop or computer to have full communication facilities at your disposal makes life easier.

To check out our comparison of what is available to us in the world of faxing software, click here now.

By P James.

How to remain in communication when your email system goes down by using Faxing Software

Nothing is infallible, even in this day and age of wonderful technology.

Picture the scenario, you have to get a vital purchase order over to a supplier or a customer 5 minutes ago, you hit the “Send” on your email – and nothing happens. Your email system has just been invaded by the internet gremlins and it’s going to be at least an hour before the engineer can get to you to solve the problem.

A telephone call will not suffice, as they have to receive the information with the signature on the purchase order. And if this order is not fulfilled – then there will be knock on consequences to the rest of your business.

“If you’d like to fax it over to us we can accept a faxed copy…” But you don’t have a fax machine! Fax machines themselves do seem to be getting less popular and not all that many businesses own a separate fax machine now.

It can seem pointless to spend money on a separate fax machine when laptops and computer have the ability to send fax messages over the internet now. And sometimes the space required for a separate machine is just not available! So make full use of the ability within your computer and use faxing software as a back up measure in case your email system ever does get invaded by the internet gremlins!

To check out our comparison of what is available to us in the world of faxing software, click here now.

By P James.

Top 3 Reasons to Use Faxing Software

1. Ability to remain in full communication at all times with faxing software.

In the age we live in of constant communication, it seems that it’s no longer acceptable to not have access to full methods of communication even when we are out of the office. It seems to matter little that you may be on your way to a vitally important meeting with a customer or client, supplier, or business partner, if someone requests information in a fax from you with a deadline – they would have to wait until you returned to the office.

2. Able to send faxes from anywhere with an internet connection.

With the faxing software, all you need is an internet connection and sending a fax message becomes as easy as sending an email. You type in the recipient’s number, which can even be imported from your address book on the computer directly, type a quick header page message, and even attach a file that will print as if you had selected “File, Print”.

3. Able to receive faxes at anytime.

With most faxing software, there is a feature that lets faxes be delivered straight to your email address. The sender simply types in your fax number that is assigned to you through the faxing software, and then forwards any faxes received into your email inbox. The next time you have an internet signal, and can sign into your email account – there are all your fax’s just waiting for you – never miss another fax again!

To check out our comparison of what is available to us in the world of faxing software, click here now.

By P James.

Why do we still have to use Fax’s in the day and age of email?

There’s no getting away from it, no matter how technology savvy most companies or businesses are today, some still insist on receiving information/requests by fax.

You’ve seen the advertisements for instance, for car insurance and the like – where they claim “Will not be beaten on price”.  Then when you go to telephone them to tell them that Company X-Car can give you the same like for like cover at two thirds of the price you’ve just been quoted by your existing company, the response given is generally “Can you send us that quote by fax to this number please?”

There may be many reasons for this however problematic it may first feel.  No only with insurance companies, but  the financial industry, and legal services being some of the most common sectors still requesting information by fax.

The other benefit to continuing to send a fax is as a back up to the email system.  If the system goes down and emails are either not getting through, or going out – it’s easier to send a fax rather than wait for the IT people to mend the email system.

With so many companies having sometimes quite complicated email addresses for their employees, unless you have received an email from them in the first instance, it is sometimes a nightmare getting an email through to them without receiving a “Mail Returned – Unknown Recipient” even if you’ve called them to obtain their email address!  A quick call to determine their fax number and you can have the message off to them with no further problems.

To check out our comparison of what is available to us in the world of faxing software, click here now.

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