What is the difference between COLD and imaging?
A. Imaging is for scanning, compressing, storing, indexing, OCRing, searching and retrieving millions of pages of paper documents or electronic documents archived as permanent images. COLD is for archiving, indexing, searching and printing reports from huge text files generated by mainframes, mini-computers and other computer applications. COLD stores huge report files and extracted index fields on hard disk, optical cartridge or CD-ROM instead of printing all the information out on paper or storing it to microfilm.
Imaging is for scanning, compressing, storing, indexing, OCRing, searching and retrieving millions of pages of paper documents or electronic documents archived as permanent images. COLD is for archiving, indexing, searching and printing reports from huge text files generated by mainframes, mini-computers and other computer applications. COLD stores huge report files and extracted index fields on hard disk, optical cartridge or CD-ROM instead of printing all the information out on paper or storing it to microfilm.
A. Imaging is for scanning, compressing, storing, indexing, searching and viewing paper documents or electronic documents archived as permanent images. COLD is for archiving, indexing, searching and printing reports from text files generated by mainframes, mini-computers and other computer applications. COLD stores report files and extracted index fields on hard disk, optical cartridge or CD-ROM instead of printing all the information out on paper or storing it to microfilm.
A. COLD is specifically for archiving, indexing, searching and printing reports from high-volume text files generated by mainframes, mini-computers and other computer applications. COLD stores large report files and extracted index fields on hard disk, optical cartridge or CD-ROM instead of printing all the information out on paper or storing it to microfilm.