Information about Internet Fax

Internet fax uses the internet to receive and send faxes.

Traditional faxing involves sending a scanned copy of a document (a facsimile) from one fax machine to another, over the phone network. Internet faxing (or "online faxing") is a general term which can refer to one of several methods of achieving this over the Internet - with a goal of both reduced costs and increased functionality over traditional faxing.

Depending on the specific method/implementation (see below), advantages of using the internet can include
  1. no extra telephone line required for the fax
  2. paperless communication, integrated with email
  3. send and receive multiple faxes simultaneously
  4. reduction in phone costs
Note that depending on which method is used, suitable equipment and/or the use of a gateway is required (see below).

Traditional fax

The traditional method for sending faxes over phone lines (PSTN)
  • Fax machine → Phoneline → Fax machine
A fax machine is an electronic instrument composed of a scanner, a modem, and a printer. It transmits data in the form of pulses via a telephone line to a recipient, usually another fax machine, which then transforms these impulses into images, and prints them on paper.

The traditional method requires a phone line, and only one fax can be sent or received at a time.

Computer-based faxing

As modems came into wider use with personal computers, the computer was used to send faxes directly. Instead of first printing a hard copy to be then sent via fax machine, a document could now be printed directly to the software fax, then sent via the computer's modem. Receiving faxes was accomplished similarly.
  • Computer → Phone line → Fax machine
  • Fax Machine → Phone line → Computer
A disadvantage of receiving faxes this way is that the computer has to be turned on and running the fax software to receive any faxes.
Note: This method is distinct from Internet faxing as the information is sent directly over the telephone network, not over the Internet.

Internet fax servers/gateways

The Internet has enabled development of several other methods of sending and receiving a fax. The more common method is an extension of computer-based faxing, and involves using a fax server/gateway to the Internet to convert between faxes and emails. It is often referred to as "fax to mail" or "mail to fax". This technology is more and more replacing the traditional fax machine because it offers the advantage of dispensing with the machine as well as the additional telephone line.

Reception:
  • Fax machine → Phone line → Fax gateway → email message (over Internet) → computer email account
A fax is sent via the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) on the fax server, which receives the fax and converts it into PDF or TIFF format, according to the instructions of the user. The fax is then transmitted to the Web server which posts it in the Web interface on the account of the subscriber, who is alerted of the reception by an email containing the fax in an attached file and sometimes by a message on his mobile phone.

Sending:
  • Computer → Internet → Fax gateway → Phone line → Fax machine
From his/her computer, in the supplier Web site, the user chooses the document s/he wants to send and the fax number of the recipient. When sending, the document is usually converted to PDF format and sent by the Web server to the fax server, which then transmits it to the recipient fax machine via the Standard Telephone Network. Then the user receives a confirmation that the sending was carried out, in his/her web interface and/or by email.

An Internet fax service allows one to send faxes from a computer via an Internet connection, thanks to a Web interface usually available on the supplier's Web site. This technology has many advantages:
  • No fax machine → no maintenance, no paper, toner expenditure, possible repairs, etc.
  • Mobility → All actions are done on the Web interface; the service is thus available from any computer connected to Internet, everywhere in the world.
  • Confidentiality → The faxes are received directly on the account of the user; he is the only one who can access it. The received faxes are not likely to be lost any more or read by the wrong people.
  • No installation of software or hardware → All actions are done on the Web interface of the supplier, on the account of the user.
  • No telephone subscription for an additional line dedicated to the fax.
  • Many faxes can be sent or received simultaneously, and faxes can be received while the computer is switched off.

Fax using Voice over IP

Making phone calls over the Internet (Voice over Internet Protocol, or VoIP) has become increasingly popular. Compressing fax signals is different from compressing voice signals, so a new standard (T.38) has been created for this. If the VoIP adapter and gateway are T.38 compliant, most fax machines can simply be plugged into the VoIP adapter instead of a regular phone line.
  • Fax machine → VoIP adapter → VoIP gateway → Phone line → Fax machine (or vice versa)
As with regular faxes, only one fax can be sent or received at a time.

Fax using email

While the needs of computer-to-fax communications are well covered, the simplicity of quickly faxing a handwritten document combined with the advantages of email are not.

"iFax" (T.37) was designed for fax machines to directly communicate via email. Faxes are sent as e-mail attachments in a TIFF-F format.
  • iFax machine → email message (over Internet) → computer email account
  • iFax machine → email message (over Internet) → iFax machine (using email address)
A new fax machine (supporting iFax/T.37) is required, as well as a known email address for the sending and receiving machines. This has limited the standard's use, though a system for looking up a fax's email address based on its phone number is under development [1].

To work with existing fax machines, all iFax machines support standard faxing (requiring a regular phone line). Alternatively, an iFax can be used in conjunction with a fax gateway.
  • iFax machine → email message (over Internet) → Fax gateway → Phone line → traditional Fax machine (or vice versa)

See also

Fax (short for facsimile, from Latin fac simile, "make similar", i.e. "make a copy") is a telecommunications technology used to transfer copies (facsimiles) of documents, especially using affordable devices operating over the telephone network.
..... Click the link for more information.
worldwide view.
A telephone line or telephone circuit (or just line or circuit within the industry) is a single-user circuit on a telephone communications system.
..... Click the link for more information.
worldwide view.
A telephone line or telephone circuit (or just line or circuit within the industry) is a single-user circuit on a telephone communications system.
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The public switched telephone network (PSTN) is the network of the world's public circuit-switched telephone networks, in much the same way that the Internet is the network of the world's public IP-based packet-switched networks.
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A fax server is a set of software running on a server computer which is equipped with one or more fax-capable modems attached to telephone lines (or, more recently, software modem emulators which use T.38 ("Fax over IP") technology to transmit the signal over an IP network).
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Portable Document Format (PDF)

Adobe Reader displaying a PDF in Microsoft Windows Vista
File extension: .pdf
MIME type: application/pdf
Type code: 'PDF ' (including a single space)
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Tagged Image File Format

File extension: .tiff, .tif
MIME type: image/tiff, image/tiff-fx
Type code: TIFF
Uniform Type Identifier: public.
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web server can mean one of two things:
  1. A computer program that is responsible for accepting HTTP requests from clients, which are known as web browsers, and serving them HTTP responses along with optional data contents, which usually are web pages such as HTML documents and

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Portable Document Format (PDF)

Adobe Reader displaying a PDF in Microsoft Windows Vista
File extension: .pdf
MIME type: application/pdf
Type code: 'PDF ' (including a single space)
..... Click the link for more information.
web server can mean one of two things:
  1. A computer program that is responsible for accepting HTTP requests from clients, which are known as web browsers, and serving them HTTP responses along with optional data contents, which usually are web pages such as HTML documents and

..... Click the link for more information.
A fax server is a set of software running on a server computer which is equipped with one or more fax-capable modems attached to telephone lines (or, more recently, software modem emulators which use T.38 ("Fax over IP") technology to transmit the signal over an IP network).
..... Click the link for more information.
A website (alternatively, Web site or web site) is a collection of Web pages, images, videos or other digital assets that is hosted on one or several Web server(s), usually accessible via the Internet, cell phone or a LAN.
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Voice over Internet Protocol, also called VoIP, IP Telephony, Internet telephony, Broadband telephony, Broadband Phone and Voice over Broadband is the routing of voice conversations over the Internet or through any other IP-based network.
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T.38 is an ITU recommendation for sending fax messages over IP networks in real time by encapsulating a standard T.30 fax data stream. T.38 is also used to describe the actual data and is a registered MIME sub-type in RFC 3362

Fax over IP alternatives to T.38

  • T.

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T.37 is an ITU standard which deals with sending fax messages using email. It is also referred to as "iFax", "Internet Fax", or "Store-forward-fax".

A fax machine supporting T.
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e-mail attachment (or email attachment) is a computer file which is sent along with an e-mail message. The file may be sent as a separate message, but now it is almost universally sent as part of the message to which it is attached.
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Fax (short for facsimile, from Latin fac simile, "make similar", i.e. "make a copy") is a telecommunications technology used to transfer copies (facsimiles) of documents, especially using affordable devices operating over the telephone network.
..... Click the link for more information.
A fax server is a set of software running on a server computer which is equipped with one or more fax-capable modems attached to telephone lines (or, more recently, software modem emulators which use T.38 ("Fax over IP") technology to transmit the signal over an IP network).
..... Click the link for more information.


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