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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 7/16/17 2:56 AM, David G Dixon
wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote cite="mid:02947D83EF7A4B07AAF50459367ABBD3@galvanox01"
type="cite">
<div dir="ltr" align="left"><span class="647095409-16072017"><font
face="Arial" color="#0000ff" size="2">Three things in
response to Bernie's message below:</font></span></div>
<div dir="ltr" align="left"><span class="647095409-16072017"></span> </div>
<div dir="ltr" align="left"><span class="647095409-16072017"><font
face="Arial" color="#0000ff" size="2">1) Nobody at my
university would care about me making scans -- copies,
maybe, if I didn't pay for them out of my own account, but
scans don't cost anything.</font></span></div>
</blockquote>
<br>
<font color="#0000ff"><font size="2"><font face="Arial">they
probably do indeed pay for the scan to file feature, but not
per page. I doubt they own this equipment. Do they?<br>
Pretty sure someone other than you pays for this equipment. Of
course I don't think it really matters here, as it doesn't
cost them more if more pages are scanned.<br>
<br>
Seriously, I would expect that any copy/print shop scanned all
this to file (PDF) in the last 10-15 years. No one is putting
that large of a document through a feeder over and over. The
DOC must be on file now as a PDF(even if they don't tell you
that) you may have to pay to get that PDF, but they have it.
Copy machines now scan once to pdf or similar. It's on file/
on demand.<br>
<br>
</font></font></font>
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