Articles
E-signature will never steal the thunder of bigger, dare we say sexier, enterprise technology.
It's a workhorse. And as such, it's rarely in the spotlight.
But in the last six months, the technology has received a growing amount of interest.
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The digital workplace got another nudge forward this week, this time from an integration between Laserfiche and SIGNiX.
The companies are partnering to provide all-in-one enterprise content management (ECM) and e-signatures.
Both play hard in the financial and government verticals, and both have been developing their ecosystems slowly but surely.
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E-signatures are supposed to make life easier for companies. They’re supposed to save businesses money. They’re supposed to carry the same legal and compliance weight as pen and paper.
So why, then, are so many e-signature vendors, including some of the most well-known, failing at all of these key
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No matter what news broke this week, the big deal was always going to about the general release of SharePoint 2016.
That became especially true after Microsoft Corporate Vice President Jeff Teper announced two months ago that Microsoft would outline the roadmap for SharePoint along with the release.
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We've heard about the promise of the paperless office for years now, with little to no evidence of the promise translating to reality. But recent research by the Association for Information and Image Management (AIIM) shows that maybe, just maybe, things are starting to change.
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There’ll be no separate Sunrise for Microsoft.
Instead, Microsoft is pulling the built-in calendar app for Android and iOS that it bought for $100 million earlier this year into Outlook.
According to a blog post that appeared this week, the Sunrise team is now officially a part of
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Say what you want about the merits of e-signatures. But in this hypothetical case, one thing is certain: had they been around in the summer of 1776, they would have changed the course of history — if not for the United States, at least for John Hancock.
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