

Kevin Lossner Septem9:50 I'll leave the detailed legal opinions to the attorneys among us, but suitable declarations or disclaimers displayed together with the number may address some of that. I used to use a fax modem many years ago for similar reasons, but faxes have become such a rare thing in my business over the past decade that I haven't bothered about such solutions in a long time. I can see this being useful when I'm travelling or to save me the trouble of re-scanning faxes for OCR purposes. It's an interesting application and one for which I can see some integration possibilities with other applications I use, such as LSP.net's Online Translation Manager. I haven't looked into the security issues with the site yet I'll probably be appalled when I do. A few minutes later I received copies of the faxes as e-mail attachments. In just a few minutes I could see TIFF files for the faxes on the account area on the web site. My best guess was somewhere in the UK, so I tried faxing from my real landline fax number, adding the +44 prefix to the number from the web page. However, the web page that communicated this information didn't say where it was local. Signing up took a few minutes, then I was give a local telephone number to use for receiving faxes. I followed the link out of curiosity and decided to give it a try.
#Pamfax insecured free
While browsing the blogs of various colleagues, I ran into an interesting note from Céline Graciet mentioning her use of a free fax to e-mail service as part of a planned move to the UK.
