Luis,

That is fine and dandy for anybody, but this needs to be idiot proof;
meaning he has a bunch of girls maybe high school kids working there doing
this stuff and if the wrong information goes into the wrong patients files
he could get his ass in a sling legally.

You are right, re-writing a scanning program is the wrong way of doing it,
but there is a way to do an API call which would call the TWAIN32.dll file,
Photoshop does it, and most imaging applications do as well.  Now, being
able to tie in the scanning application with this application looks like the
easy part, the hard part is getting those newly scanned files in a folder
where they belong and being automatically tied into the patient's
information is the hard part.

I am thinking PHP isn't up to this task, and Visual Basic will be better
suited, damn I hate saying that!



"Luis Ferro" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hi there,
>
> For a complex task as such, and without needing to "rewrite" the wheel
> (that means write a new scanning program) i would use:
>
> a) a scanner that works in a networked environment and as the ability to
> send the scannings to emails (i remmeber that the network scanners from
> HP can do it - even if they are a bit weird to configure...)
> b) create either a global mail drop box to send all scanned documents to
> it or create a mail box for each patient...
> c) write a much simpler pop3/imap program to handle the archiving needs
> with a web interface...
>
> For scanning, the good doctor would only need to go to the scanner,
> place the document and press a button... in the scanner
>
> For archiving, he would just go to the site and place the newly scanned
> documents in the patient file...
>
> Cheers,
> Luis Ferro
> TelaDigital
>
> P.S.- warning... the HP net scanners are weird to configure as they
> require a domain to "distribute" the scannings and have some limitations
> with regard of the ip network settings of the scanning server and the ip
> of the scanners by themselfs. They must reside in the same net mask...
> which in large distributed networks is a no-no... apart from that, they
> work very well...
>




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