Printing a secure print job A secure print job does not automatically print. When printing, select the Xerox copier and then click on Printer Properties , or other similar options that will open the Xerox Printing Preferences window. Under Job Type , select Secure Print. Click OK twice. Choose any other settings needed and Print. Proceed to Releasing a secure print job. Releasing a secure print job On the printer, go to Job Status. Select your WatIAM userid.
Click the print job, and then select Release. Type in the passcode, and then press Enter. Scanning documents to email Place your paper document on the copier as if you were making a photocopy.
Select New Recipient. In the To : field, enter the email address to which you want to send documents, and then press Enter. Configure how the document is emailed through the options available.
By default, documents are sent as PDFs. Setting up an email address list on the Xerox To make the process of scanning to email easier, you can set up an email address list on your Xerox so that you can just choose an email address from the list, rather than having to type it in. Create a small file in Excel that lists the names and email addresses of the people you would like in the address list on the Xerox: Email that file to to be determined in the Arts Computing Office, and ask them to add the list to the email address list on your Xerox.
Sending a fax Place your paper document on the copier as if you were making a photocopy. On the printer, select All Services and then select Email. In the To : field, enter the fax number as an email address according to the following format: 6 [fax-number] fax.
As a noun- Xeroxer 2. In present tense- xerox 3. In past tense- xeroxed 4. In present continuous tense- xeroxing. Man, that boy Derrick is a major Xeroxer. Don't xerox my ish. He totally xeroxed my body wash. You can't just keep xeroxing people's style.
Before the Xerox, when an important letter arrived, only a small number of higher-ups clapped eyes on it. But after the photocopier arrived, employees began copying magazine articles and white papers they felt everyone else should see and circulating them with abandon.
Wrote a memo? Why not send it to everyone? Copying was liberating and addicting. White-collar workers had complained of information overload before.
But the culprit was industrial processes—book publishers, newspapers. The photocopier was different. It allowed the average office drone to become an engine of overload, handing stacks of material to bewildered colleagues. Copying also infected everyday life. Employees would sneak their own personal items on the machine, copying their IRS returns, party invitations, recipes. Chain letters began demanding participants not only forward the letter, but send out 20 copies—because, hey, now anyone could!
And people quickly realized they could make paper replicas of physical objects, placing their hands—or, whipping down their pants, their rear ends—on the copier glass. This copying of objects could be put to curiously practical purposes. The bizarre welter of things being replicated made even the folks at Xerox worry they had unleashed Promethean forces.
Yet for everyday people, replicating nonsense was the best part of the copier—an illicit thrill. Hiding behind the anonymity of a duplicated document, office workers began circulating off-color jokes and cartoons. Jokes about the intelligence of various ethnic groups abounded, as did sexually explicit material. Artists, too, flocked to the device, thrilled by the high-contrast, low-fi prints it produced—so unlike either photography or traditional printing.
As they showed, photocopying had an aesthetic. In essence, the photocopier was not merely a vehicle for copying. It became a mechanism for sub-rosa publishing—a way of seizing the means of production, circulating ideas that would previously have been difficult to get past censors and editors. This had powerful political effects.
Secrets were harder to keep, documents easier to leak.
0コメント