Overview
The OKIOFFICE 44 by Okidata is an outstanding multifunction device,
offering superb printing along with solid copying, faxing, and
scanning capabilities.
The OKIOFFICE�s 600dpi resolution produced sharp, evenly filled
characters and perfectly smooth curves, even when printing 72-point
type. The device has a 512KB memory and a bi-directional parallel
interface for communication back to the PC. The paper tray holds
100 sheets.
Functions
Scan
The black-and-white scanner incorporates robust OCR capabilities,
scans images and text simultaneously, and saves them together or
separately at resolutions of 200 x 100, 200 x 200, or 200 x 400,
with regular or dithered pixels.
The scanner is simple to operate and can be accessed directly from
other applications. Scans can be dragged into WordScan for OCR
processing. OKIOFFICE lets users create a scan just like the
original or change type size, line spacing, justification,
indentation, and margins.
Images can be saved in several formats, including versions of .TIF,
.PCX, .PDA, Word, WordPerfect, WordStar, and XyWrite.
20-Sheet Input For copying, scanning, and faxing, the paper tray
holds 20 sheets. After loading the paper to be copied, the user
presses the Copy key.
Copy
A single copy is produced after a slight pause. For multiple
copies, the user enters the number desired then pushes the Copy key
again. Up to 50 copies of a document can be made at a time.
Copy resolution ranges from 100 x 100 dpi for standard copies to
200 x 400 dpi for extra fine. Photo resolution is 200 x 200
dpi.
A manual paper feeder lets users change papers for selected copies.
With the JetScan software, users can reduce, enlarge, rotate, and
format copies to fit one, two, or four images per page.
Fax
The device transmits one fax page every six seconds and can be
operated as a standalone or PC-driven fax machine. It includes
256KB fax memory (upgradeable to 1.25MB) and can store 10 one-touch
numbers and 45 auto-dials.
Users can reject unsolicited faxes and, if the device is not
connected to a PC, it can store incoming messages in memory when
it�s out of paper.
When connected to a PC, faxes are stored on the hard drive. Faxes
can be stored in memory and sent later, broadcast normally or as a
broadcast relay, and sent confidentially so a password is required
at the receiving end to access the message stored in memory.