The beautification of the OSI Model with Document Imaging

I was recently taking some online courses on software development best-practices courtesy of Coursera.  In these courses they would use the phrase ‘beautiful code’ to describe well-written software code.  This means that the software is written in a fashion that is efficient and not bloated.  Microsoft Vista, for example, was the epitome of NOT beautiful code because it was slow, had limited native hardware support and not enough compelling innovation.  On the contrary, Salesforce.com and Box.com are two excellent examples of beautiful code where the User Interface is feature-rich and useful.  Additionally, the software is quick to respond and is highly available to the user in a ubiquitous fashion, from any device, anywhere at any time – especially with the user experience optimized for mobile devices.  From a computing standpoint I happen to personally think that Document Imaging is the ‘beautification’ of the computing communication technology stack.  Let me explain.

 

Enriching people’s lives with effective communication

When a particular technology is so good for so many different reasons, this is what makes Document Imaging/ECM and Capture so beautiful.  This technology allows businesses to reduce labor costs associated with information management.  It affords organizations the luxury of sharing electronic files and helps to assist with compliance and regulations.  Document Imaging is one of the best ways to have a solid disaster recovery plan which is beautiful.  It’s simply beautiful that people’s lives are enriched to do other activities such as attend your children’s sporting events, spend a night at the movies with your loved ones or just relax at the pool reading your favorite book instead of doing mundane tasks such as manual data entry or looking for lost documents.

 

Document Imaging is the crown-jewel in effective communications

Computer networks are the collection of many different technologies that come together to do “something”.  The OSI Model is a way in which the various components and/or protocols can be described and these components are mostly just taken for granted these days, it just simply works.  We don’t need to worry ourselves about things such as TCP/IP, DNS or IPv6.  It just happens.  The technology has evolved to a point we can focus on getting value from these communications networks.  So when Document Imaging is applied as an application that brings all these components together and brings true value to networked systems, this really is a beautiful thing.

 

 

The benefits of Document Imaging are beautiful things

The benefits of applying Document Imaging within organizations can be clearly measured in tangible financial return on investment such as in the case of AutoNation’s 13-month ROI on their nationwide distributed scanning deployment.  Or sometimes the financial benefits are less of a motivation such as the case is with Care Ambulance’s scanning deployment where they placed scanners inside of ambulance’s and created an integrated capture and communication solution.  In this case, the primary motivation of the project was to provide the highest level of patient care possible and capturing timely, as well as accurate, information was critical to this project.  This is simply beautiful now that the emergency medical technicians (EMTs) can now focus a maximum amount of the time and efforts on caring for their patients instead of dealing with paperwork.

Therefore, that’s why as an industry we should be so passionate about promoting our technology.  Creating beautiful code for a software application is a great thing, but applying technologies such as document capture and ECM to a communication network is remarkable to enrich people’s lives.

Do you think that technology can be beautiful?  Do you have a story to tell of how beautiful technology enriched your personal life?

Central Administration Server software with the Fujitsu network-attached scanners

One of the really beneficial features of the Fujitsu network-attached scanners is the Central Administration Server (CAS) software that’s included with the devices.  You can easily download the software from the scanners, install on a Windows server and have this great capability up and running in no time.  Below is a hyperlink to a YouTube video that I scripted and narrated that highlights this handy feature.  Enjoy!

Fujitsu network-attached scanner Central Administration Server software

Scan to Microsoft SharePoint with the ScanSnap fi-6010N iScanner network scanner

This was a video script I wrote and narrated to show the Scan to Microsoft SharePoint capability of the Fujitsu fi-6010N network-attached scanner.  Please click the link below to view the video on YouTube:

Scan to Microsoft SharePoint with the ScanSnap fi-6010N iScanner network scanner

The Social Network

The Social NetworkI just finished watching the movie “The Social Network”. Not sure how much is fact or how much is fiction but nevertheless I found it entertaining.

The movie was a good dose of the entrepreneurial spirit, a slice of the harshness that is the business world and a great life lesson on being honest and true to your friendships. It’s hard to believe that the phenomenon known as “facebook” is basically only 7 years old. According to the movie, facebook was incorporated in 2004. It started as nothing more than a simple web site in an already crowded field of similar “social” sites all of which were vying for more and more users.

If you believe the film you are led to believe that Mark Zuckerberg adamantly resisted the temptation to start selling advertisements on the site once they had achieved modest success. I have not researched, nor paid much attention to how Zuckerberg ran the company at the time, but as a facebook member for quite a while now and seeing how the site has evolved over time it’s not hard to believe that this is true of his philosophy. From a business perspective, and especially for a web site business, I have personally witnessed what once started as a good social site become quickly overran with obnoxious advertisements, non-stop pop-up banners and/or infested with viruses/Trojans or spyware. Anyone remember the likes of Geocities, Limewire or even, dare I say, MySpace? All of which are gone or soon to-be gone.

While I do recall some frustration with facebook outages a few years ago when they were growing and adding so many users very quickly, the truth is that the service has been extremely reliable to my standards which are pretty high when it comes to service availability. Also, facebook does serve advertisements but I think they are subtle enough that it’s not annoying and the ads are not all x-rated like so many other web sites these days. This shows some level of responsibility and decorum on the part of facebook to keep their community clean and fun for everyone. I’m sure porn sponsors would love nothing more than to pay big money to serve stupid ads that have the potential to be seen by more than 500 million users!

Overall I think the movie had a good moral story. You almost can’t blame a young successful kid for making silly mistakes. For example (warning: spoiler-alert if you haven’t seen the movie), Zuckerberg allowed himself to get caught up in the fast-paced, party lifestyle that was introduced to him by the founder of Napster, Sean Parker. This mentorship by Sean Parker was both a blessing as well as a curse. This ‘friendship’ and the business connections that Sean Parker had allowed facebook to get the venture capital investment that allowed them to become legitimate and ultimately become the company they are to this very day. At the end of the movie, which is already a bit dated (released in 2010) they said the net worth of facebook was $25 billion dollars. I’ve heard estimations as high as a $50 billion dollar net worth and I know for a fact that they just raised $1.5 billion in additional investment so it’s clear in the business community that there is serious value here and well worth investing. Just a random Kevin Neal thought here but the real challenge with all these cool web based ideas is how to monetize a cool idea.

Anyhow, the curse of the ‘friendship’ with Sean Parker was that apparently his personal character was shady and unprofessional at times. Sure, he had the business connections to get facebook the financial investments they needed to succeed but his personal conduct could have nearly ruined the business as well.

I got the feeling at the end of the movie that writers portrayed Zuckerberg as missing something emotionally in spite of his success. He missed his ex-girlfriend as well as his original business partner.

Some interesting items I found from the movie:

• I love analogies and this was a good one from Sean Parker’s character. “Will you be known for fishing the 3000 pound marlin or 14 trout?”
• Simple ideas can truly be magical with a little common sense and a lot of hard work
• Be true to your friends and don’t trust posers

It will be interesting for me to finally now do some research on the ‘real’ story and see how much of the movie was reality versus fiction. I give The Social Network a eight out of ten Steeler-star rating.

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