Home
Products
KIC II
OPUS
Mobile ILL
WideTEK Super B
WideTEK Super C
WideTEK 36
BSCAN ILL
Bookeye 2
Bookeye 3 A1
Bookeye 3 A2
Support
How To Order
About Us
Contact Us
News
 

Walk-up scanning ... as fast
an easy as walk up copying


Knowledge Imaging Center

Too big for a copier...
But not to big for a KIC

  • Full Color 17x24" scan area – four times  a letter-size page
  • Markable PDF’s for study
  • Instantly clip images on-screen
  • Save to USB thumb drives, email, FTP
  • Highlight text while studying PDFs.
  • Drop images directly into reports
  • No toner, drums, etc. – environmentally friendly

    New KIC Usage Statistics
Knowledge Imaging Centers

KIC allows students to capture study material to their notebook computers, where they’re spending an ever increasing amount of time. In addition, KIC makes it easy to enhance the quality of reports and papers with crystal clear color and black and white excerpts from books, magazines and journals. In addition, as a UDSA compliant digitization system, conveniently located amongst the stacks, it can be used as an ad hoc digitization station by your Preservation, Archive and Interlibrary Loan departments. Knowledge Imaging Center kiosks are designed from the ground up for university libraries. The centerpiece of the kiosk, a color book scanner, is made to handle virtually any size books as well as flat material from postage stamp size up to 17 x 24 inches in black and white or full color. KIC kiosks output to paper and USB Flash Drives (e.g. Jump Drives), and can transfer across the Internet directly to the student’s PC. In addition, a university’s KIC kiosk network retains each user’s images scanned from the first day of classes through final exams. Its speed, ease of use and UDSA compatibility, maximizes its versatility.



KIC II is wheelchair accessible

Click here to see a video of KIC II in use

KIC With Bookeye scanner

Click here to see another video of KIC II in use

KIC APPLICATIONS

Reports and Papers

Today, most students use computers to create their reports and papers. Without an easy way to digitize excerpts from books and magazines, they must print their papers with space reserved for excerpted text, photos, graphs and charts, copy the excerpts, clip and paste or tape, then finally copy the resulting document.

Some university libraries have small, ‘personal’ flatbed scanners attached to a few of their computers. However, as long as the capture of text, photos, charts and graphs from your collection is cumbersome and inconvenient, digitization will not be considered an everyday tool that enhances the value of library resources. KIC is the most cost-effective way to provide students and faculty with high quality, high speed scanning of excerpts from books and large materials. Virtually any digitization need is handled easily by KIC kiosks.

Lecture Notes

Lecture notes are a student’s best record of their university academic experience. It can be useful, even necessary to retain these notes for subsequent related courses and after graduation as well. However, the notes are usually spread between loose leaf paper, bound notebooks and lab books. KIC offers a simple way to organize students’ lecture notes – students can scan their notes throughout the term, printing to paper, writing to a USB Flash Drives (e.g. Jump Drives) and transferring to their PC as desired.

Course Curriculum Materials

Use KIC kiosks as an additional distribution point for course curriculum materials – by USB Flash Drives (e.g. Jump Drives), print or Internet transfer to student PCs – and these materials can be included on the Term Encapsulation USB Jump drive. As the main distribution point, students can collect their course curriculum materials any time during the library’s extended hours. As a secondary distribution point, if a student misplaces his or her course curriculum materials, they can easily be retrieved.

Collecting library research digitally and studying on-screen

People spend more time in their favorite environments. Such is the case with the notebook computer. By making it very easy to digitize selected research, KIC provides libraries with another direct connection to the students’ notebook computers. PDF files, the preferred output format for studying, provides students with the ability to electronically highlight, underline or strikethrough selected text.

Kic has many ways to store and send information.

1) Jumpdrive

2) E-mail

3) FTP

4) Network Printer

5) Network CD Burner

6) KIC Sync CLICK HERE to demo and learn more about KIC Sync















© 2007 Image Access. All rights reserved. Privacy/Legal | Contact Us

 

 


Click Here To View
KIC Usage Statistics

Close Box