Submitted By: Chris Taylor on August 3, 2010
Yesterday, Nuance announced the new release of its award-winning desktop PDF software, Nuance PDF Converter Enterprise 7. Nuance is continuing to improve their position in the office solution space with this new product which works seamlessly with Nuance eCopy solutions, which Nuance acquired in 2009. With a variety of connectors for eCopy ShareScan and PaperWorks to build off of, PDF Converter Enterprise 7 promises it will enable users with the full functional benefits of PDF and connectivity into DMS.
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Submitted By: Randall Dazo on March 26, 2010
In February, Nuance held an industry analyst briefing to provide an update of new announcements, status of the acquisition and integration of eCopy, and the future direction of the imaging group. Robert Weideman, Nuance General Manager and SVP, kicked off the meeting with an overview of Nuance and the history of their company. With the tagline “Nuance – the experience speaks for itself™”, Mr. Weideman recounted the rich history of applications, solutions and technology wins for the company. Some of these include mobile solutions in over 3 billion cell phones, applications in 4,000 healthcare institutions, and more than 8 billion customer care interactions annually utilizing some form of Nuance technology. Although many of these accolades stem from their speech to text division, there are certainly strong statistics coming from their document imaging group such as more than 21 million registered desktop users and 100,000 MFP solutions. Nonetheless, Nuance has positioned itself as a leader in the conversion space, whether it is voice or image to text. Read more »
Submitted By: Anne Valaitis on October 6, 2009
Nuance has completed an acquisition of eCopy. Apparently inked on September 30th, the Nuance acquisition shouldn’t be surprising in this rather accelerated time of consolidation. In fact it seems compression in our industry is hitting a fever pitch these days with acquisition news abound. We ponder on a daily basis, who is next, what makes sense, and who can afford to acquire whom?
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