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Screenshot Gallery
The
following screenshots are taken from X2Net OneStore: -
(Tip:
Click
on the screenshot thumbnail to view the screenshot full size
in a new window)
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Main Interface
X2Net OneStore uses a familiar interface using the
standard Office 2007 Ribbon type control to provide
quick navigation and access.
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Scanning an Item
When you scan an item you are presented with a
screen to detail the name you want it to be stored
under; how many pages to scan; where the item will
be physically stored; whether the item should
expire; what categories it should be part of; and a
range of other options. All items are optional, you
can always go back and change things later. |
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Viewing an
individual item When viewing an individual
item there are a range of operations you can perform
on it such as printing it; or saving it to a file;
or sending it by e-mail; as well as options to tidy
the item up by de-skewing it or rotating or cropping
it. |
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Printing to the
X2Net OneStore Virtual Printer You can print
items to the X2Net OneStore Virtual Printer rather
than print them to paper in the first place. X2Net
OneStore will capture them just the same as if you
had printed and then scanned them! When you print to
the X2Net OneStore Virtual Printer you get a
notification that the material has been captured. |
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Capturing Screen
Clips, Clipboard Items and Audio You can
easily capture things you see on your screen, items
you copy to the Windows clipboard and even audio
recordings for easy storage in X2Net OneStore.
Simply right-click the X2Net OneStore icon in the
system tray and select what you want to capture. You
can also capture by hot-key too. |
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Configuring
OneStore You can easily configure OneStore to
work exactly the way you want it to. |
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Sharing your data
You can share your data across a local network, a
VPN or even across the Internet. X2Net OneStore has
been built to be fast, and performance is perfectly
adequate even using ADSL connections. The database
can support thousands of users, and the amount of
storage is limited only by the capabilities of the
underlying database, so for all practical purposes
is almost unlimited. |
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Remotely Accessing
your data You can even access your data using
a remote web browser, perhaps at an internet café;
at a client's premises; at a friends house; or even
on a mobile phone with Internet Access, such as an
iPhone. To do this all that is required is that the
system holding the data is switched on and
accessible from the Internet and that TCP Port 16001
is open through any firewalls. |
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