Showing posts with label paperless office. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paperless office. Show all posts
Thursday, September 11, 2008
Paper and School Spirit
I went to my daughter's high school today, and it was amazing the amount of paper that was being used for posters for school spirit and such. I wonder if it's going go be recycled, or if even the idea of being environmental has been thought of. I am sure they face the same team year after year, so every year they make new paper banners? Any thoughts of recycling? Just some random thoughts.
Sunday, February 10, 2008
Paperless Office - New Scanners Helping
When I worked in Silicon Valley almost 10 years ago, a co-worker, Tim (brilliant guy), scanned everything at home. Same reasoning as this article from the NY Times, Pushing Paper Out The Door, mentions - as an easier way to keep track of things. When I looked into it at the time, the speed of scanners was a big issue. Still is, but it seems to be getting better. I have noticed that for scanning images the speed is much better (I use a CanoScan 8600F), but there can be driver problems with some programs (PhotoShop). It's nice to read that OCR has improved dramatically as has the ability to use a paper feed on scanners. Last time I looked at scanners I did not see a low cost paper feed, especially one that can deal with different size papers. Using a desktop search tool as a way to find previously written information is great! The problem I have seen is these tools can result is a slower PC.
I see this eventually have a huge impact on the amount of paper used. The problem with a paperless office is paper is easy to use, faster to read than E-Mails, and easily transportable. It also has no boot time and is easily edited. If you have an image on a computer, to add text is a bit inconvenient. And doing searches on images is still a challenge, as well as categorizing them. A filing cabinet is an amazing piece of organizational hardware, that currently is still not as easy to replicate on the PC. It is getting closer which I look forward to.
Previous Related Post:
Green Status of US Companies
I see this eventually have a huge impact on the amount of paper used. The problem with a paperless office is paper is easy to use, faster to read than E-Mails, and easily transportable. It also has no boot time and is easily edited. If you have an image on a computer, to add text is a bit inconvenient. And doing searches on images is still a challenge, as well as categorizing them. A filing cabinet is an amazing piece of organizational hardware, that currently is still not as easy to replicate on the PC. It is getting closer which I look forward to.
Previous Related Post:
Green Status of US Companies
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