Fujitsu has created an incredibly small automatic document feed scanner in
the Scansnap S300, which offers a 10-sheet paper tray capable of handling sizes
from A4 right down to business cards.
Powered by either AC or USB, it’s compact and stylish, and while not nearly
as small as manual feed scanners, it should fit in most briefcases. We see this
being used more in the home office, though, and both its design and provided
software orient it at digitising documents to try and establish a paperless
environment.
Indeed, the S300 is only capable of scanning to PDF format and isn’t Twain
compatible, so you won’t be able to use it with other image applications you
might have installed. This sounds like a big drawback, and could put some people
off, but if you’ll only be digitising documents it's not too much of a problem.
The scanner starts up as soon as you open the lid and is ready to use almost
immediately.
All quality and configuration settings are managed via the software, and once
everything's set up you can simply place a wad of paper into the ADF tray and
hit the scan button. At default quality settings it ploughs through an A4 page
in just a few seconds. Documents can also be turned into searchable PDFs on the
fly.
If you’re looking for high-end performance, perhaps in scanning images, and
expect sharp results with accurate colours, you’ll be let down. Even at optimum
quality, at which scanning takes a just less than a minute per page, we noticed
that lines weren’t very sharp and colours weren’t particularly solid or vibrant.
The S300 is squarely oriented at the office environment and, although it’s
effective, we’d have liked it to be a more capable all-rounder, particularly as
it costs more than £200.
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