Scan, Ricoh aficio mp1350 – Ricoh MP1350 User Manual

Page 38

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Copyright © 2006 MCA Internet, LLC dba BERTL.

13 November 2006

All Rights Reserved. The license under which this document is made available and applicable law prohibit any reproduction or further transmission of any portion of this document. This
document may only be viewed electronically through the www.BERTL.com Web site and may not be stored in electronic or hard copy format. Any reproduction of trademarks is strictly
prohibited. BERTL accepts no responsibility for any inaccuracies or omissions contained in this document.

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Ricoh Aficio MP1350

Market Background Information
In just a few years, network scanning has
moved from a luxury item to one of the most
important functions on many MFPs.

Virtually all MFPs offer standard or optional

network scanning. Document feeder design is now a
major focus with users looking for higher speed, low
resolution capabilities, more versatile scan functions, and
even color scanning on devices only equipped with
monochrome marking engines.

Address Book Integration
Integration into central corporate address books on LDAP
or NT servers is the de facto standard today, as is the
ability to force-populate outgoing email with sender
information through an enforced login process. This way,
outgoing communications from the remote MFP can be
traced back to the user and audited for compliance
purposes.

Destinations
Scan-to destinations include email, SMB (Windows
desktop locations), FTP, and Internet fax. In some
instances, the scan goes directly to the hard drive. An
email is sent to the recipient with a URL link so they can
quickly download the scan file from the device hard drive
location. A growing number of devices are starting to
include external media ports to allow scanning directly to
USB memory sticks or digital camera SD chips. We expect
to see this be commonplace over the next year.

Security
Security is another hot point in scanning. Several devices
now include the capability to send scan messages using
encrypted PDF or other secure transfer medium. This can
be an important factor in many industries that are sensitive
to data theft or misuse.

Integration with Third-Party Applications
The big buzz in the MFP industry is the move toward open
architecture, where the firmware backbone of the device is
based on an industry standard like Java or .NET rather
than a proprietary system. This opens great opportunities
for far greater MFP integration with other software
applications through third-party applications created with
software developer kits (SDK).





Through these partnerships, scanning from the MFP can
take on a new life, doing more than just routing files from
the MFP to an email or folder. Now, information can be
directed into a sophisticated workflow complete with
metadata, billing information, image enhancement, and
other functions. All are from the initial scanning action,
rather than the multi-stage process used previously.

Currently, there is great differentiation in the field of
scanning as manufacturers continue to develop this
aspect of the device. Watch for more image enhancement
and workflow capabilities to become commonplace as
scanning continues to pick up the pace as a dominant
factor.


Scan Features Summary

Maximum Scan Speed (Mono)

80-ipm

Maximum, Scan Speed (Color)

80-ipm

Document Feeder Capacity

100 sheets

Connectivity Options

Ethernet 10/100BaseT

Scan to email

Standard

Scan to SMB

Standard

Scan to FTP

Standard

Scan to HDD

Standard

Scan to URL

Standard

Scan to Internet Fax

No

TWAIN Scanning

Standard

Scan to External Memory
Source (USB/SD card)

No

Network Authentication

Standard

LDAP Authentication

Standard

File Formats Supported

PDF, TIFF, JPEG,
High Compression PDF

Encrypted PDF Format

Standard

Resolution Options

100, 200, 300, 400, 600 dpi
(1,200 dpi with TWAIN)

Ad hoc Subject Line Entry

Standard

Ad hoc Message Line Entry

Standard

Ad hoc File Name Entry

Standard

Scan

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