About Microsoft Office Document Imaging

With Microsoft Office Document Imaging, you can use a scanned document as easily as other Microsoft Office documents on your computer.

You can:

When should you use Microsoft Office Document Imaging?

Use Microsoft Office Document Imaging when you want to:

Scanning and imaging

Microsoft Office Document Imaging actually has two components — a scanning component and an imaging component — listed separately in the Windows Start menu as Microsoft Office Document Scanning and Microsoft Office Document Imaging.

The first component controls the scanning of documents into your computer by using any installed scanner. This is done by using scanning presets, which control your scanner by using settings that are optimized for specific purposes. For example, the Black and white scanning preset is ideal when scanning pages of text for OCR, while the Color scanning preset is best for scanning full-color pictures or artwork. Also, OCR is automatically performed by default on text documents immediately after scanning, and you can easily scan multiple pages into a single file.

The second component makes it easy to view scanned documents on the screen, rearrange multi-page documents, select and manipulate recognized text, and send documents to others in e-mail.