I know a guy that was hired for 3 months to scan the documents for a legal case that started 20 years ago. This was about a year ago. Patient files in smaller medical practices are normally hand written. They are thrown out if patients do not return after a few years. I think there still is a small market for the product,
It's interesting. I'm actually surprised with how many people commented with the cases they would genuinely take advantage. I might be wrong about how digitised the world is after all
I have 50 photo albums that my Dad wants scanned - taking out the individual pictures would take forever, but the albums are hugely varied in size and many have the problem with page warp when opened. My only hesitation with this scanner is light glare. The albumns have plastic sleeves and many of the photos are glossy. But, this was useful information to help me make a decision.
You'd be surprised how many specialized books are print only. Also, you can get the print book shipped internationally, while the ebook is often only available in specific regions.
wow this is really impressive, and I didn't expect it clicking on the title. not useful for myself directly, but I will most likely benefit from others' use of this product in my lifetime.
@@notenoughtech and nobody comes even close... oh, now i get flooded by memories... the carpet ppl... the one where they discover that the discworld is a giant machine... death gets retired... the old conan type... the feather IS stronger then the sword, if its a big enough feather... our brains are amazing, haven't thought about this universe for well over a decade, but its all there, even 20 years after ingestion...
When I ripped all my vinyl collection some years back, I had real trouble getting the sleeves and covers of a 12 inch record scanned in; there were no flatbed scanners big enough. I ended up scanning sections and stitching them together with a graphics package from Microsoft. I wonder if this would be able to scan a 12 inch cover in one pass?