The idea that one day we'd have paperless offices was first mooted in the 1970s, but 40 years on we're still firmly wedded to sheets of pulped wood. Even a geek like me can see the attraction of paper ...
I think it’s fair to say that most of us have too much paper in our lives, whether it’s business documents, receipts, financial statements, or (my personal weakness) keepsake scraps like menus and ...
There are a variety of small, portable scanners available for those who need on-the-spot scanning abilities. One of the latest is Apparent’s Doxie Go, a compact, battery-powered mobile scanner. The ...
You probably never thought that your scanner could be “social,” able to automatically upload documents to the likes of Flickr, Google Docs, Twitter, Evernote, and more. You probably also bet against ...
It’s small, very lightweight, easy to set up and cheap ($129), but the Apparent Doxie is slower than some of the competition and only scans one side of a page at a ...
I have one of Doxie’s neat candybar-shaped paper scanners, and it’s great for getting through piles of paper. I can scan bills, flyers, photos and even whole books – I ripped all the pages from a ...
Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology. The Apparent Doxie One lets you scan without a computer ...
Doxie describes its latest portable scanner as a wireless, rechargeable, super-portable paper scanner for everyone, adding that going paperless has never been easier. After taking it on a recent ...
Apparent today announced its Doxie One mobile scanner. It's cordless (no computer required), highly portable, and writes scans to SD cards. It can sync with a Mac or PC, and (with an optional ...
Price: £112.99. Positives: a fast, convenient and simple way to digitise papers. Negatives: scan resolution (detail) could be higher. A year ago I wrote about the Doxie Go, a neat scanner that could ...