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CardScan Raves &
Reviews

"CardScan is worth considering if you want to organize your
life electronically and get more out of your PC."
Walter Mossberg
The Wall Street Journal
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"CardScan Executive Version
5 is a simple, surefire productivity tool."
Bruce Brown
PC Magazine |
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"I was most impressed with how well it then moved the data
into other programs and devices."
Stephen C. Miller
The New York Times
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Scroll down or click on one of
the following topics for more reviews of CardScan:
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GENERAL
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Mark Kellner
Washington Times
February 14, 2000
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"CardScan Executive turns drudgery into something
akin to sheer delight. ... Taking care if business cards may seem like
a mundane task. But with the CardScan system, which I have used for a
while and expect to keep on using, it's not the drudgery it once was.
If riding herd on your contact list is a priority (and all the experts
on time management say it should be one), then this system is as
indispensable as having a fresh supply of your own cards for your next
meeting." |
Alan Goldstein
Dallas Morning News
December 23, 1999 |
"One of the most tedious parts of returning from a
trade show or conference is taking a stack of newly acquired business
cards and entering the data line by line into a computer. CardScan
eliminates much of the hassle." |
James Coates
Chicago Tribune
December 5, 1999 |
"Holiday shoppers have all kinds of reasons to
consider the latest rendition of CardScan, a brick-size business card
scanner and some very slick software that makes a relative cakewalk
out of entering stacks of business cards into one's computer database.
... Corex's special business card reading software does much better
than other character-recognition programs in figuring out the small
type and graphics that make scanning cards a real chore. ... A new
split area-code module is of particular merit." |
Steve Barth
Portable Computing
November 1999 |
"There are high-end scanners for corporate document
management, but Mr. Sole Proprietor will get a lot more mileage out of
a business card scanner. Corex's latest CardScan will suck up business
cards, recognize the text and file the right database fields with a
good level of accuracy." |
John Dickinson,
Home Office Computing
November 1999 |
"USB is a fine technology; I'm happy products like
the CardScan are appearing on the scene." |
John Fried
Philadelphia Inquirer
June 24, 1999 |
"Feed a business card to CardScan, and it gently
sucks the card into its innards. ... I tested CardScan with a dozen
business cards. Some were in pristine shape, others a little
dog-eared. A couple of them had notes scrawled on them. ... the
scanner and its software read and translated the cards with a high
degree of intelligence." |
Jay Small
Indianapolis Star
June 21, 1999 |
"Until recently, it was easier to wade through a
disorganized pile of cards to find an address than to stop whatever
else I was doing and enter all that data into my contact manager. Now
I use a program called CardScan. You can use CardScan one of two ways
-- either with a miniature card-size scanner ... or with any flatbed
desktop scanner that is TWAIN-compliant. ... It’s surprisingly
accurate, given that many business card designs -- with their tiny
text and unusual typeface choices aren’t exactly ideal for
optical character recognition. If you already have a scanner, the
software is a good buy, too." |
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Bill Howard
PC Magazine
June 8, 1999
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"There are two specialty scanners I dearly love:
the sheet-fed Visioneer PaperPort Strobe and the business card-reading
Corex CardScan." |
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Gordon Bass
PC/Computing
June 1999
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"Why type? Stop flipping through a stack of
business cards for contact information; get organized with the Corex
CardScan Executive." |
Promotional Products Business
May 1999 |
"CardScan enables you to download business cards
very quickly and efficiently into your database. ... It places all of
the information on the card in its respective place in your database.
Amazing!" |
David Rensin
Pen Computing Magazine
April 1999 |
"Every profession has its Holy Grail. For a product
reviewer, it’s finding a product that you just can’t live without.
CardScan is just such a product. ... The most impressive features of
CardScan are its phenomenal accuracy and blazing speed. ... If you get
a lot of business cards but don’t have the time or patience to enter
them all into your PIM, then get a CardScan. This is probably the most
useful product I have ever reviewed." |
Gordon Ung
Maximum PC
March 1999 |
"If contact information is important to your
business, the Corex (CardScan) scanner is worth the investment. The
Executive chews through business cards faster than a wood
chipper." |
Paula Rooney
Computer Retail Week
December 14, 1998 |
"Ideal gifts for professionals: CardScan Executive,
a business card management system that enables professionals to scan
business cards into PCs, handheld computers and personal information
managers." |
Rob Kay & Jeff Bloom
Pacific Business News
December 14, 1998 |
"CardScan has got to be one of the coolest business
tools we’ve ever seen. It allows you to take all those business
cards that are probably cluttering up your drawer or wallet and easily
scan the data into a database on your desktop computer. ... The
software is full-featured, well-designed and easy to use." |
Michael Caton
PC Week Online
December 1998 |
"This (CardScan) is one of those very useful tools
that just about any business user will appreciate. ... The key to this
product working so well is that it keeps a graphical representation of
the card with the data." |
Jason Byrne
Government Computer News
December 1998 |
"CardScan can rescue you from business-card
shuffle. ... No need to procrastinate any longer. ... Corex
programmers have fine-tuned the program’s intelligence to place the
right information in the right field. Because there is no such thing
as a standard business card layout, this is a very difficult
assignment." |
Sm@rt Reseller
November 2, 1998 |
"The staff at Smart Reseller has nearly worn out a
CardScan unit, processing stack after stack of cards." |
Eric Lundquist
PC Week
September 28, 1998 |
"My vote for a new rev of a product that performs
as promised goes to Corex Technologies' CardScan. I’ve been using it
to catch up on the stacks of business cards that always follow me back
from trade shows. This scanner is much faster and much more accurate
than any typist. Cheers for a product that is worth the upgrade
price." |
San Jose Mercury News
December 17, 1998 |
"One of the most popular pieces of hardware in my
cubicle. ... Corex Technologies’ CardScan is a handy little device
that takes paper business cards, scans them and turns them into
searchable data files." |
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John Dodge
Boston Globe
November 5, 1998
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"There's a wide variety of inexpensive scanners,
printers and fax machines. One of my favorites is CardScan, which
scans business cards into a digital Rolodex." |
HGTV
Alex Bennett
March 1998 |
"CardScan reads all the information in some magic
technologic way. It puts all the information in the proper places. ...
An amazing and very useful product. ... I’m not giving this one
back." |
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ACCURACY
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Rich Dalton
Newsday
February 3, 2000 |
"If your idea of a Rolodex is a wad of business
cards wrapped in a rubber band, it's time to turn your expensive PC
into a cheap address book. ... And best of all, you don't have to type
in the business cards. CardScan, a small scanner designed to read
business cards, will do it for you. ... CardScan software is
incredibly accurate in matching the fields." |
Earl Selby
PC Paper
December 1999 |
"The big enchilada for us in keeping hundreds of
cards under prefect control ... A gem called CardScan. It scans any
card you feed into its little desktop unit. ... Rat-a-tat-tat-that's
how fast you can scan cards. And that's it. CardScan's AccuCard
technology, loaded into your PC from a CD-ROM, is magical in reading
cards and segregating names, etc. into database fields." |
Doug Mohney
Interesting Times
July 5, 1999 |
"I’ve got a CardScan sitting on my desk, a gizmo
that reads business cards at a pretty fast clip. I’ve fed nearly 500
cards into it and the results are pretty impressive when you stop to
consider all the artistic license people take in design these
days." |
Bob Schwabach
ON Computers Syndicated Column
April 6, 1999 |
"Typing them (business cards) into your database is
a nuisance, but you might want to get in touch with these people
someday. An easy way out is to run the cards through the new CardScan
from Corex Technologies. ... I tried CardScan on a variety of business
cards and it was surprisingly accurate. ... This gadget works." |
Barry Bayer
Law Office Technology
April 1999 |
"CardScan software does two things: It converts
graphics into text and determines which group of text properly fits
into which database field. We were amazed to see how well it did with
both functions. ... More impressive was the ability of CardScan to put
words into the correct fields. ... At $300 for scanner and software,
CardScan is an excellent value. ... CardScan is excellent at what it
does." |
Lisa Greim Everitt
Denver Rocky Mountain News
December 14, 1998 |
"Readers praise the improved accuracy of this $299
device, which allows the overworked person on your list to eliminate
the stack of business cards on his or her desk. ... Clutter be
gone!" |
Lynn Greiner
Computing Canada
December 14, 1998 |
"The best little device in town (CardScan);
Incredible accuracy makes this impressive little business card scanner
the best on the market. ... The software is nothing short of
miraculous. ... To make a long story short, CardScan is an impressive
product." |
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Henry Norr
San Francisco Chronicle
December 10, 1998
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"Another gizmo that almost any professional should
appreciate is Corex’s CardScan Executive, a device that scans
business cards and generates a convenient database. The latest
software release, version 4, makes it better than ever. Recognition
accuracy ... is remarkably good." |
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Lance Ulanoff
Windows Magazine
December 1998
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"A business card scanner may be just the ticket to
help you tame the unruly collection of cards lurking in and around
your desk. ... CardScan’s OCR accuracy is exceptional." |
Cheryl Currid
Houston Chronicle
October 16, 1998 |
"For business travelers, the $299 6-inch-by-7-inch
CardScan Executive packs easily to let you scan and store business
card information while on the road. ... Just for fun, we challenged
the software by feeding in several cards upside down. We also used
cards with difficult to read logos. Despite our tricks, the software
read most of the text perfectly." |
James Coates
The Chicago Tribune
December 1996 |
"It does amazingly well in keeping the promise on
the box, which is to allow a user to feed a stack of business cards
quickly through a scanner and then accurately render the information
into computer-readable text." |
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CONNECTIVITY
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Joel Dreyfuss
Fortune Magazine
February 21, 2000
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"Corex has upgraded the look of the small, black
device (CardScan), giving it a more contemporary styling. But the real
value is CardScan's software, which has improved. It now recognizes
foreign languages and phone numbers and smartly moves the data into
the right spot in your Palm, Microsoft Outlook, Lotus Organizer, Act,
GoldMine or LotusNotes address book. ... It beats sitting at your PC
and inputting that stack of cards from your last business trip." |
Holly Aguirre
Home Office Computing
June 1999 |
"The CardScan Executive from Corex can help you put
that drawerful of contacts right where they belong: in your favorite
personal information manager. ... Better yet, CardScan interacts with
several PIMs, including Symantec’s ACT!, Microsoft Outlook, and
Lotus Notes, and an array of mobile tools such as Windows CE and Palm
devices." |
Richard Shim
Computer Shopper
February 1999. |
"We found CardScan Executive to be as convenient on
the mobile platform as it is on a desktop." |
Jim Louderback
ZDTV and PC Week
January 13, 1999 |
"CardScan did a darn good job; nice and fast. It
got pretty much everything right. … There’s a big difference
between all these business cards in your drawer and most of them in
here accurately, in your computer. ... The other nice thing is you can
transfer all this information into all the popular contact managers
like Act or Notes, even down to the PalmPilot or Windows CE machines.
You can actually get all this information where you need it, which is
on the road or in your notebook." |
Mobile Technology Sourcebook
1999 |
"If you have a drawer full of business cards
you’ve been meaning to organize, look no further for a swift
solution. ... The CardScan Executive’s OCR engine scans data into
your PC, handheld, or PIM." |
Pen Computing Buyer’s Guide
Summer/ Fall 1998 |
"CardScan has excellent export capabilities by
supporting no less than 100 different types of PIMs and fax
software." |
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Yardena Arar
PC World
October 1998
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"Savvy business card collectors don’t type in all
those names and numbers into their contact manager -- they use a card
scanner to do the job. The latest release of CardScan software makes
this job easier than ever. The Intellisync feature alone is worth
CardScan 4.0’s $79 street price." |
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Andy Pargh
USA Today
October 27, 1998
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"CardScan Executive; Just insert a business card
and watch the data magically appear on your PC, PalmPilot, Lotus Notes
or Microsoft Outlook database." |
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Joel Dreyfuss
Fortune
October 26, 1998
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"It was a pleasure to see CardScan flawlessly zap
names and addresses into my Ecco file. Now I have one less reason to
dread business trips." |
Toronto Life
October 1998 |
"Our favorite accessory for the PalmPilot and Palm
III is the Corex CardScan, a nifty little gadget that reads business
cards and slots the name, title, company name and address into the
correct fields, then dumps it into your PalmPilot for easy retrieval.
You can toss those business cards littering your briefcase into the
blue box for good." |
Stephen C. Miller
November 14, 1998
New York Times
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"Business cards are the bane of my existence. ... I
tested Corex Technologies’ CardScan. The company was one of the
first into the market and is one of the leaders. ... The software has
reached a point where it whips through a variety of business cards
without breathing hard. ... It zips them through fast ... and
processes them all at once ... While the ability to accurately read,
translate and properly categorize business cards is the core of the
product, I was most impressed with how well it then moved the data
into other programs and devices. ... The CardScan software is quite
good as a stand alone contact manager. ... Two pleasant things
developed during this evaluation, I found the card of a missing friend
and my desk drawer is now half empty." |
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N’Gai Croal
Newsweek
August 17, 1998
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"CardScan 300 has a more recognizable interface --
it’s modeled after an actual Rolodex. What’s more, if you click on
the phone-number category for a card that you’ve scanned, it will
dial the number for you. ... What’s best about the CardScan 300 is
that it works more smoothly with the popular PalmPilot
organizer." |
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BENEFITS
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American Lawyer Magazine
February 2000 |
"Graduate your job-hunt networking beyond the
rubber band files. CardScan Executive loads the static data from a
bizcard into a dynamic, searchable resource, synchronizes with your
PDA or digital cell phone-all without keyboarding." |
Maria Medina
Imaging & Document Solutions
February 2000 |
"Think of CardScan Executive as a way to unlock the
information trapped on all those business cards you have laying
around. With CardScan, you can even share that knowledge with your
desktop applications, your personal digital assistant and your mobile
phone. ... The system's accuracy was impressive. ... At $299, CardScan
is a no-brainer investment that will keep all your contact information
up-to-date and in sync."
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Bruce Brown
PC Magazine
January 18, 2000
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"CardScan Executive Version 5 is a simple, surefire
productivity tool." |
Stephen Miller
New York Times
December 23, 1999 |
"CardScan Executive solves the problem of getting
business cards out of your wallet and into your database. Connected to
your personal computer or laptop, it can read a surprising number of
idiosyncratic business cards and gets the information correct." |
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Tracey Capen
PC World
December 1999
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"Clean, simple and quick, CardScan turns
paper-based business cards into an on-screen digital card file. ... A
must for anyone who collects boatloads of business cards and wants to
actually use them for something." |
Mark Kellner
Washington Times
December 13, 1999 |
"CardScan is a great tool for staying organized.
Check this one out." |
Gregory Taggert
Bloomberg Personal Finance
December 1999 |
"If time is a problem, here's a gadget you need.
It's one of those one-purpose marvels you find in in-flight magazines
that elicit, "Yeah, like a hole in the head." Well, get out
your head drill. CardScan takes all those business cards cluttering
your desk and transfers the important information into your favorite
contact manager. ... If you've ever strained your eyes entering
contact information into your Palm handheld, this one's for you." |
Ken Dulaney
Gartner Group/Executive Edge
September 1999 |
"Buying one is fairly easy to justify if you
collect a lot of business cards, especially when you consider the time
and effort spent on manually re-keying card information. And it can be
shared among any number of harried executives." |
Debbie Barrett
Technology in Government
September 1999 |
"My favorite time-saver is CardScan from Corex
technologies. It’s so simple. You simply slide a business card into
a mini-scanner and the image is converted into an electronic Rolodex.
Export to ACT or Microsoft Outlook is immediate and dynamic." |
Robert Becnel
PC Journal
July 1999 |
"The scanner is a small footprint. ... Ideal to
pack into a suitcase or travel bag for use on the road. ... The
scanning process is a few seconds and the accuracy is remarkable and
reliable." |
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Shane McLaughlin
INC.
June 15, 1999
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"Andrew Beebe and Tim Roberts kept some of their
most important data in the unlikeliest of places: a cardboard box. ...
So the partners jumped when they heard about CardScan. The benefits
have been enormous. The device has allowed Beebe to add 500 contacts
to his PalmPilot in three months. But he’s most thrilled about not
being chained to his desk, keying in minutiae." |
Rebecca Day
Robb Report
May 1999 |
"Behold the business card. By itself, the simple
business card isn’t a threat to your sanity, but come home with a
stack of them after a road trip and you could be facing organizational
chaos. ... With the Corex CardScan business card scanner, you can
store all the text information from a standard business card into a
virtual Rolodex." |
Laptop Buyer’s Guide and Handbook
May 1999 |
If we assume that CE sand Pilot owners finish their
business trips with pockets full of business cars, and that the
information on those cards has to get into those CEs and Pilots the
CardScan Executive is worth every cent. ... The software does a highly
credible job of placing the data into the appropriate fields. ... If
you’ve got a drawer full of business cards awaiting attention, the
CardScan Executive is just what you need." |
David Trowbridge
Computer Technology Review
April 1999 |
"I found the CardScan Executive a useful tool. ...
I have no doubt it is far more useful and cost effective when used in
a network situation with many people. ... One thing I’m sure of,
without CardScan functionality ... I’ll continue piling up business
cards next to the keyboard rather than in my Palm III where they
belong." |
Working at Home
February 1999 |
"Got enough business cards in your wallet to
wallpaper your den? Organize them quickly and economically with this
revolutionary item (CardScan)." |
Jared Miniman
WinCELair
January 22, 1999 |
"There is no doubt about it -- CardScan v4.0 can
easily revolutionize how you track contact information. With amazing
flexibility yet simplicity when desired, CardScan makes the scanning
of even the most complex business cards a breeze. ... Perhaps the most
practical benefit is that it is, quite simply, a major time saver. No
more flipping through dozens of sloppy paper cards. Just search for
what you want using CardScan's QuickSearch! ... You definitely would
be hard pressed to find a more accurate, more sophisticated, more
sensible business card scanner than the amazing CardScan Executive. I
give Corex Technologies' CardScan Executive 5 out of 6 WinCELair
Review Orbs for the above reasons." |
Mobile Technology Sourcebook
1999 |
"If you have a drawer full of business cards
you’ve been meaning to organize, look no further for a swift
solution. ... The CardScan Executive’s OCR engine scans data into
your PC, handheld, or PIM." |
Terry Brock
Atlanta Business Chronicle
December 7, 1998 |
"I am impressed with a little device called
CardScan. ... The biggest benefits in time savings came from using
many cards and batch-processing them. ... This tool helps you get
vital information for important people faster and easier." |
John M. Moran
The Hartford Courant
December 5, 1998 |
"Here's the solution to every traveling
businessperson's nightmare. ... This special-purpose device (CardScan
Executive) actually does the job it advertises and does it well." |
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David Carnoy
Success
December 1998
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"It’s time to stop collecting all those business
cards and then manually entering their information into your
contact-management software. Say no to data entry, and try Corex’s
CardScan Executive. This popular business card scanner is now faster
and more accurate and it synchronizes directly with most contact
managers as well as PalmPilots and Windows CE devices." |
Financial Times
November 18, 1998 |
"For those of us on a more modest budget, my latest
toy is CardScan from Corex Technologies -- a nifty little scanner. ...
For anyone who collects dozens of business cards, CardScan is a great
time-saver. ... It is amazingly good at deciphering the varying
typefaces and designs. As one who has accumulated piles of cards -- I
am delighted with my newest toy." |
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Bruce Brown
PC Magazine
November 17, 1998
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"CardScan’s application provides many useful
features for organizing and using contact information. ... Scanning
accuracy is its most notable strength, but CardScan Executive offers
much more: its own communication links, editing software, and
extensive capabilities to synchronize with other products." |
Palm Zone
November 3, 1998 |
"The folks at Corex seem to have packed in tons of
new technology into their new CardScan Executive package. ... This
tool would suit anyone who has to deal with tons of business cards and
have no time on their hands to patiently key in all the contact
information." |
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Jim Powell
Windows Magazine
November 1998
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"My suggestion: Put CardScan 4 to work. ...
CardScan's improved interface and amazing accuracy quickly turns
business cards into useful information. ... This pain-free scanning
solution earns a spot on our WinList." |
Susan Gregory Thomas
U.S. News and World Report
October 19, 1998 |
"You want to store the names from your Rolodex on
your desktop and palmtop, but who’s got time to type in all those
business cards? Pop them, one by one, into the Corex CardScan
Executive, a $300 paperback-book size scanner. It formats business
cards for electronic organizers like ACT!, Microsoft Outlook, Lotus
Organizer, and PalmPilots and Windows CE devices." |
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Walter Mossberg
The Wall Street Journal
September 10, 1998
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"I find the product dramatically improved and
finally useful. ... The scanner directly inserts the card data into
its included organizer software, which is full-featured and well
designed…CardScan is worth considering if you want to organize your
life electronically and get more out of your PC." |
Steve Dotto
Dotto’s Data Café
Season 6, Show 6.2 |
"I hate entering all the text from business cards,
and I’m a slow typist. Watch this (CardScan demo) and see if you
don’t ask Santa for one of these under the tree, provided of course,
you can wait that long." |
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EASE OF USE
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Maximum PC
March 2000 |
"Nothing has made Gordon Mah Ung more effusive in
the past month than CardScan Executive, and when Gordon goes ga-ga for
something we pay attention. ... In just a few minutes, CardScan 500
scans 100 business cards, then recognizes and sorts your contact
information. If the optical character recognition fails-which it
rarely does-you can simply refer to the optical image of the business
card." |
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Mark Kellner
Washington Times
February 14, 2000
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"The new CardScan scanner seems a bit more accurate
than its predecessors, and sports a USB connection to boot. This could
be a great plus when doing field work or at a trade show; hook up the
scanner to a notebook PC and you can build a contact list on the
fly." |
Terry Moriarty
Intelligent Enterprise
June 22, 1999 |
"I scanned eight business cards into the system,
and the data on each card was placed differently. ... Everything was
random, from one card to the next. The system couldn’t have cared
less. It processed the scanned business cards and translated the data
with near perfection into its card file. ... CardScan is easy to use
and faster than manually entering business cards into your PIM. What
more could you ask of a productivity booster?" |
Steve Barth
Sales & Field Force Automation
April 1999 |
"The CardScan Executive from Corex might be just
the business card organizer you need. ... A comprehensive user’s
manual details all of the system’s functions, but you’ll find its
basic functions intuitive and easy to learn. ... I converted an entire
box full of business cards into what is now a valuable database of
more than a thousand contacts." |
Kash Sablok
Voice Entertainment
December 26, 1998 |
"Not only is CardScan easy to use, easy to setup
and easy to navigate in, it looks cool too. ... CardScan Executive
shines. ... With CardScan’s convenience and speed, it is hard to
imagine a desk without one." |
Laptop Buyer’s Guide and Handbook
October 1998 |
"Don’t let that stack of business cards on your
desk intimidate you. Let Corex Technologies’ CardScan capture the
data lurking in there. The intelligent software knows where to put
each data field, separating names from addresses from phone numbers
and so on." |
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Simson Garfinkel
Boston Globe
October 1, 1998
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"The scanning process is smooth and simple. And
unlike other scanning applications that I've used, you can do all of
your scanning at once, then leave your computer alone while it does
the optical recognition in the background." |
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