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98% OPINION:Getting there from here
Summary: Traditional imaging applications will be document-centric, not image-centric any more. In fact, there won't even be an "imaging market." And these are mostly still image-only systems; the "document-centric" users must work in other departments. Why isn't this enough to image-enable lending, claims and A/P applications? Why do the expensive, monolithic imaging systems still rule the market?
92% OPINION The year nothing happened Summary: The year nothing happened. None of this happened, of course. Reason number two was the Web. More infrastructure investment. Next year we'll surely revel in The Year A Whole Lot Happened.
92% Jumping off a bridge to the 21st century Summary: Jumping off a bridge to the 21st century. Let's start with the paradigm shift. The operative word at Giga was economy, as in new economy, digital economy, or knowledge economy. We don't get too many of those new economies. The point is that the old rules don't apply in the new economy.
91% Why users are confused Summary: Why users are confused. "We've always been a 'what' industry in a 'how' market," observed one pundit gravely, with just the right blend of pithiness and inscrutability. Sure, users are confused. Users have every right to be. Or should I just wait?
91% opinionAug96 Summary: Imaging World, August 1st, 1996. Can Oracle breathe life into component imaging?) Given Oracle's intention to unify document management and messaging with mission-critical database applications, the possibility exists that a dedicated document server--the missing piece of the component imaging puzzle--may no longer be necessary. But while the application side of the integration is easy, the...
91% EDMS technology is becoming a central theme in... Summary: ... lending operations EDMS applications. operations EDMS applications. ... cash management EDMS applications. ... item processing EDMS applications. all items archive.
90% Opinion & Editorial Summary: Imaging World, June 1st, 1996. More on SCS in July 1st's IW. Imaging is dead. But the world is changing. I do agree with you that some imagers won't thrive in the new world.
90% silver Summary: The main reason is that Lotus and Microsoft still don't have all the pieces in place.lotus.microsoft.com/exchange/workflow/work. The Workflow Hub is Microsoft's planned implementation of MAPI Workflow in Exchange Server.
90% Desktop imaging redux Summary: Upon installation, Imaging Pro automatically creates scan icons in the Word and Excel toolbars. * Runs in a Web browser. Imaging Pro not only runs as a Windows 95 or NT desktop executable, it runs inside the Internet Explorer Web browser, too. * Web link annotations. Clicking on the link annotation in the image viewer displays the linked document, if necessary launching the browser and retrieving...
90% Weighing in on NT Summary: However, I do not think this is a bad position for NT to be in." "The missing pieces are 32-bit applications. She is willing to speculate, though: "Would I develop a mission-critical document management application on NT? Enterprisewide implementations take longer. Silver agrees: "I don't think that NT is shifting down.
90% Component Imaging Summary: Standalone applications and toolkits emerge. Those that sell a more standalone application approach are represented by Kofax and Cornerstone (San Jose). Cornerstone's Pixel Translations products fit more into the toolkit category. COMPONENT IMAGING MARKET. The market moves toward components.
89% Sound familiar Why hardware leads to imaging... Summary: . Why hardware leads to imaging success. In fact, the very notion of imaging as a hardware "system" business has been almost forgotten. Like the WIIS and ImagePlus systems of old, DG's software is designed to pull hardware and services. What the user is buying, however, is a business solution--not just low-cost hardware and software. Most vendors have worked too hard to separate their hardware...
89% 1996 the year in review Summary: This turned out to be a nightmareon the good days. Wang ascends ... to somewhere. Long-term impact: Not to worry. Long-term impact: CDIA is just too good an idea to flop, and it won't. Long-term impact: The virtual potential here is so great that it's hard to figure out where to start.
89% CCIM and the banking enterprise Summary: Mainly because this technology produces positive effects in the customers' back office while being more cost and time effective for the bank. Now is the time to look at alternative distribution channels and find ways to move their customers to a cheaper, more customer-centric way of making transactions." Customers should have one place they can call and find out anything they need. * Making card...
89% How the Internet is driving "wide area workflo... Summary: How the Internet is driving "wide area workflow". Convergence is a requisite for technology vendors to survive. That new type of application is wide area workflow. Wide area workflow. Convergence is now inevitable--a requisite for technology vendors to survive.
88% Web software pricing...back to the future Summary: Web software pricing. In the client-server era, the price of a perpetual license to production software has been largely based on the number of users concurrently logged on to the server, an easily tracked and enforceable number that is generally accepted as a fair measure of user value. But the sudden demand for Web-based application access is now upsetting both the technological basis of that...
87% Scanner/Web/VAR Beats Summary: Intrafed continues on the scene. BancTec announced a distribution agreement with TextWare. The Web beat. "We believe that publishing on- and off-line go hand in hand on the Web and CD, and we believe that automating the process is critical to the success of the project." Now they are asking how to solve problems."
87% Microsoft wins so what else is new? Summary: Imaging World, September 25th, 1996. Microsoft wins: so what else is new? Last year, as part of a settlement agreement, Wang succeeded in getting Microsoft to declare it Redmond's "preferred" partner in imaging and workflow. To Microsoft, where enterprise document management--including imaging and workflow--is one of about a dozen vertical markets for NT and BackOffice, it really makes no...
87% Multimedia meets the office Summary: and 17-in. So what's the hold-up? But it's more the deployment of it that's the hold-up as opposed to the technology." or 17-in. The 17-in.
87% Merging principles of Web software pricing Ne... Summary: Gradually, out of the chaos a few principles are emerging: 1. Some level of access has to be free. 5. Writing costs more than reading. Consequently, write access to the database costs more. If Web access is free, support is not. With the Web, user support is starting to be decoupled from the software price.
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