Say, for example, you are a health care physician dictating patient notes at your office in Salt Lake City to be transcribed and/or entered into an E.M.R. system by your transcriptionist in San Diego. If you are using a Pro series digital voice recorder from Olympus, Philips, Dictaphone or Grundig, the software that was included with the voice recorder will allow you to transfer files using an FTP server. Here's a quick step-by-step of how it all works...
- The dictating author records one or more voice files on their handheld recorder.
- The recorder is "docked" or connected to their desktop PC.
- The digital voice files are automatically copied to the author's PC. The software will then send the files (encrypted for security purposes, if desired) via FTP to an FTP server in the office. The recorder is then automatically erased and within a few seconds, the author is back at work.
- The typist receives an alert that dictation files are now available
- The typist selects the file they wish to transcribe from within their Transcription Software.
- Once the voice file is typed, it is moved out of the work queue and archived or deleted at a later time.
- The typed documents are stored and shared according to your existing workflow.
Another popular pro series is the 9600 digital voice recorder along with the 7277 transcription kit. Both of these include Philips' SpeechExec Pro software with FTP transfer capabilities. However, Philips' software will not allow the transcriptionist to send documents back to the sender.
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