Outsource Scanning Aperture Cards
Many organizations use and handle
aperture cards on a daily basis to access their information- usually engineering drawings, building blue prints, maps, or title records. Although this has been standard operating procedure for such a long time, scanning
aperture cards with an aperture card scanner has been changing this dynamic. If you use aperture cards to store and retrieve your documents, you are probably thinking there has to be a better way- and there is. Digital imaging is ideal for storing and retrieving documents.
The process of digitizing aperture cards has been around for over a decade, and a few well established aperture card conversion businesses- like Scanning Depot- have the required equipment and knowledge to safeguard your apertures and to achieve the best possible aperture card digital conversion results. Scanning Depot will transfer the information you have on your apertures to a digital format, such as TIFF, JPEG, PDF, etc. Digital conversion is ideal for storing and retrieving documents, especially since aperture card scanners can read Hollerith code punches.
If your aperture cards are beginning to smell like vinegar or the frames start to fall out of the cardboard, you need to consider document imaging as a way to preserve the information. If you do nothing, you may lose all your data.