h a l f b a k e r yThis ain't rocket surgery.
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It is required to print certain documents and have them in hard copies. The micro-printers will have the capability to print up to 20-50 pages on one side of a regular letter or A4 paper using high resolution. To read what is printed, use a pair of powerful reading glasses made for this purpose. This
technique works only for documents that already have a soft-copy on a computer. The first places to access a document will be the soft copy on a computer. For all audit and regulatory purposes, a hard copy will be maintained on a microprint copy. This copy can have a approval and acceptance signatures on a page that is attached in normal print.
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<estimates conservatively> 15,000 dpi? |
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it is sometimes only necessary to keep stuff for the auditor, who looks at it once, signs it as correct and then it eventually gets shredded. at first glance - this seems a very useful concept. might keep filing to a minimum which is a plus too. +1 |
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welcome to the hb. that phrase always makes me laugh for some reason or p'raps two reasons <g> |
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Why print on 8.5"x11" paper? Why not on a 0.5"-1" paper or plastic ribbon? |
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//welcome to the hb. that phrase always makes me laugh// I don't get it?! |
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Baked. I've been doing a similar thing for years. |
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<problem apparent> um, i hate to be the jackass who screws this up for you, but even if you ^could^ print that high quality, ordinary printer paper isn't uniform enough to support this kind of detail.</problem apparent> |
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hmm(ph)... seems if you gave everybody in the office microfiche readers you could save a few forests here and there. |
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