Chapter 1 – Product Description &
Specifications
Product Description
This manual describes four
Automated Routing Mode. When connected to a station port on a PBX, the FaxFinder functions as a network fax server with
Receiving. Fax clients receive faxes in the form of email attachments. From the remote fax sender’s perspective, PBX extension phone numbers are functionally identical to ordinary fax phone lines.
Sending. Fax clients on the network can send faxes directly from their PCs using any application program that can print. The application program must be set so that the FaxFinder itself is its printing destination. In response to the ‘Print’ command, the FaxFinder turns the ‘print file’ image into a fax. The FaxFinder transmits the fax to the public phone system (PSTN) or to another PBX extension.
Manual Routing Mode. When connected directly to a regular POTS line (or to a PBX without ‘convergent’ routing capability), the FF120/220/420/820 functions as an outgoing fax server with incoming fax service going through one or more attendants. Each of the FaxFinder’s modems has a separate fax number and each modem can have a separate attendant that receives the fax messages as emails and then has the duty to direct them to their intended recipients. (Note that one attendant could serve more than one of the FaxFinder’s modems – some or all of the modems.) For example, an FF820 FaxFinder might be used in a company with several departments that regularly receive faxes but in differing volumes. Suppose the sales department and the purchasing department receive many faxes and the shipping and service departments receive much less fax traffic. In that case, three of the FF820’s modems might direct faxes to a single attendant in the sales department, and an additional three modems might direct faxes to the purchasing department; one modem might be directed to an attendant for the shipping department and another to an attendant for the service department.
Outgoing faxes work the same in Manual Routing Mode as in Automated Routing Mode. That is, to send a fax, the user prints to the FaxFinder from an application program. However, all incoming faxes go to a single email recipient, the attendant, who then sends them on, as needed, to the intended recipient.
Being devices of multiple ports, the FF220/420/820 units can send and receive faxes simultaneously.
Mixed Mode. It is also possible to operate a FaxFinder unit in a mixed mode such that some of its modems are connected to PBX extensions while other of its modems are connected to POTS lines.
1For FF120/220/420/820 compatibility in Automated Routing Mode, the PBX must support ‘convergent routing,’ that is, the routing of multiple extension numbers to a single station port. PBXs lacking this functionality can still be used with the FaxFinder in Manual Routing Mode.
FaxFinder Admin User Guide | 4 |