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Faxing: Then and Now
What happened in the year 1843 that would eventually impact your working life? The
fashion re-emergence of the hoop dress you say? How about the publishing of "A
Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens? Though you may be of the strong opinion
that the only way your boss could become less of a "Scrooge" would be
through ghostly intervention, you are, unfortunately, missing the mark.
1843 was the year a Scottish inventor, Alexander Bain, developed the original concept
still used in fax machines today. Though Bain's invention - the chemical telegraph
- wasn't actually patented until December of 1846, he is still considered the "father
of the facsimile." Other inventors such as Italian physicist Giovanni Caselli
and American inventor Elisha Gray also made later contributions to the development
of modern fax machines, however Bain is still considered the main man.
Flash forward to 1994. While the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was
going into effect and Tonya Harding's accomplices were focusing on Nancy Kerrigan's
right leg, a young, international recording artist grew tired of missing important
messages and faxes during his many travels. Drawing on his high-tech background,
he set about inventing an integrated messaging network that would deliver faxes
and voicemail via an already-existing, universally-accessible channel: the Internet.
The artist was Jaye Muller, and the vision he developed swiftly grew into JFAX.COM,
a multi-million dollar corporation that offered nothing less than a dramatic lifestyle
upgrade in the way people communicated and did business in the 90s and beyond.
JFAX.COM was the world's first and only integrated messaging capability, coupled
with the ability to assign users local phone numbers in any of over 50 locations
worldwide. It linked email to every fax and every phone in the world, fulfilling
the dreams of the universal inbox and the virtual office. Seeing the incredible
value of JFAX.COM, j2 Global Communications, Inc. purchased it in 1995 and, as a
result,
eFax was born.
Today, eFax
is the #1 paperless faxing choice of individuals and businesses worldwide. eFax offers local and toll-free fax numbers that are tied
to your email, as well as tiered faxing solutions - from free to Pro service - that
meet any faxing need.
If you'd like to know more about how eFax works, sign up for eFax today and see how easy faxing can be.