Multi-Tech Systems FF420 Manual De Usuario

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Appendix D: Example Systems 
Multi-Tech Systems, Inc. 
FaxFinder Admin User Guide 
195 
Appendix D – Example Systems 
Sample FaxFinder Systems 
The FaxFinder system handles faxes in a non-conventional way.  A regular fax machine is a centralized 
resource.  The FaxFinder system decentralizes fax functions throughout a network of PCs served by the 
FaxFinder unit and by an email server in a common Ethernet network.  Here we will give you the big 
picture of how the FaxFinder Server unit and the FaxFinder Client software can deliver this convenient 
functionality. 
 
To show what you must do to implement FaxFinder functionality, we use a two fictitious companies as 
examples in this manual.  The first “Acme99, Inc.,” is a small manufacturing firm that we describe in this 
chapter.  We show, in this small sample system, the parameters that must be set in any FaxFinder 
system, both for the server and for clients.  The second fictitious example entity is “Rocky Mountain 
Construction, Inc.,” a housing developer.  References to this company will appear in later chapters of this 
manual. 
 
A regular fax machine typically operates in a common office area and is shared by multiple parties.  
Usually no individual’s fax traffic is heavy enough to justify a dedicated personal fax machine.  
Commonly, many parties go to the same fax machine to send and receive on a single ordinary phone 
line. 
 
Compared to the centralized and non-private nature of faxing with an ordinary fax machine, the FaxFinder 
system offers fax users decentralized functionality, autonomy, and privacy.  For outgoing faxes, the 
conversion of documents into electronic fax files is now done by FaxFinder Client software (that resides 
on the PC of each user) working with the print output of any application program.  Faxes can be sent to 
multiple parties with one mouse click. Outgoing faxes can consist of multiple documents and come from 
different application programs (word processors, graphics programs, spreadsheets, etc.).   
 
For incoming faxes, the FaxFinder system works differently in “Automated Routing Mode” than in “Manual 
Mode.”   
In Automated Routing Mode
, each client on the FaxFinder network has a private phone number for 
receiving faxes.  Available extension numbers on the PBX allow each FaxFinder unit to serve numerous 
clients from a single phone line. The FaxFinder transforms each incoming fax message into a graphics 
file and routes it, as an email attachment, to the intended recipient.   
In Manual Routing Mode
, all incoming faxes go to one or more fax attendants who then forward the faxes 
on to their intended recipients. (A separate fax attendant can be assigned to each of the FaxFinder’s fax 
modems.  Or, alternatively, a single attendant could handle fax traffic from all of the modems.)  In Manual 
Routing Mode, each of the FaxFinder’s modems has its own separate POTS line.  For example, a 2-port 
FaxFinder unit (an FF220) could be connected to four separate POTS lines and have a separate 
attendant for each.  Client users on the system could be divided into two groups.  Each group would have 
its own fax number for receiving incoming faxes and each group would have its own attendant. In either 
mode
, the fax recipients can be at any accessible email address, inside or outside of the local network.