PCWorld Article: Free Service Sends Faxes Via E-Mail 
       Quick viewer and crisp image quality make      receiving faxes via e-mail as convenient as      receiving them on paper.
       by Dan Littman, special to PC World       February 10, 1999, 9:02 a.m. PT 
       All kinds of online companies offer free e-mail, but now      eFax.com is providing free faxes over e-mail. 
       The idea is simple: the service gives you a fax number      that you provide to one and all. And pretty soon faxes      start arriving in your in-box as electronic attachments.
       The reality is just as simple. I was impressed by how      easy it is to set up an eFax.com account. It takes only      a few seconds to register, and the registration form      doesn't ask any nosy questions--it just needs a name,      Zip code, and e-mail address. 
       While I was perusing a page of FAQs, the eFax.com      site was busy sending me a self-installing fax viewer      and a personal identification number to allow me to      change account details such as my e-mail address.      After running the installer, I faxed some documents to      myself. They arrived in my e-mail box in less than 2      minutes. A full page of text, densely packed with      narrow 10-point type, became a 37KB attachment that      was easy to read on screen. 
       To see the faxes, I clicked the attachment icon in      Lotus Notes, then clicked Notes' Launch command to      run the viewer. Netscape Mail and Microsoft Outlook      can display eFax.com documents without running the      fax viewer.
       What's the catch? The fax number that eFax.com      provided for me is in Illinois. That means long-distance      charges for most people who want to send me a fax,      even if they're just down the street. 
       How does eFax.com make money on the service? The      company plans to add "premium services" for a fee.      Over the next couple of months, eFax.com users will      be able to send outbound faxes via e-mail; pluck text      from their faxes via automatic OCR; store faxes on the      eFax.com server and retrieve them from the road; and      provide a toll-free number for fax senders. Faxes come      with a splash screen that will carry advertising, though      eFax.com does not allow advertisers to send e-mail or      faxes to its customers directly.
       The company, formerly known as JetFax, has a      product line that revolves around fax and imaging      technology. This includes multifunction office      equipment that includes fax/e-mail integration;      HotSend, a utility that lets e-mail recipients see      attachments without the creating application; and      PaperMaster 98, a document-management database. 
       Related Links
       JetFax M900e Adds      Fax-to-E-Mail
       HotSend E-Mails      Viewable Files
       Symantec Rolls Out      WinFax Pro 9.0,      TalkWorks
       External Links
       eFax.com
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