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One quality that
seems to be developing in the information technology industry
is deliberation, as vendors take time to refine features before
touting them.
An example is a feature refined over the last year or so
by Web-based project host e-Builder to automatically route
faxes into electronic workflows. Jon Antevy, CEO of the Boca
Raton Fla.-based companyin which ENRs parent McGraw-Hill
Construction has a minority interestsays the idea is
to pull contractors who dont use computers into the
system by using fax machines, a tool most of them have.
"Those who have a computer and those who dont
can co-exist peacefully and never know who was not on line,"
says Antevy. "It has taken away our biggest competition,
which is the old way of doing business."
The process starts when a new participant gets involved.
Those who dont have access to the project Website get
a bar-coded cover sheet for faxes and an 800 number to send
them to. The code identifies the senders role in the
project and directs faxes accordingly. Queries, notes and
sketches become electronic documents that can be automatically
routed, annotated and addressed. Responses are returned through
the senders fax machine.
"Its really helpful," says user Mirjan Sinoimeri,
project manager on a ferry terminal project in New York City
for Skanska USA. "We have some contractors not part of
the group in e-Builder. The only way they have to communicate
with us electronically is by faxing things in."
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