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Somerset CC Tames Its Printing
IDS has supplied a flexible and
cost-effective solution to manage Somerset
County Council's complex printing requirements.
When Somerset installed
a new UNIX-based financial package, its whole
computing landscape started to change. Up to then, the Council
had relied on an ICL mainframe for its processing, but the
new system, QSP Financials, introduced new hardware into
the equation and forced a review of how printing should be
done.
Somerset wanted to retain its existing population of
printers - including the Xerox 4050 that handled the bulk
of high volume printing - and therefore needed to find a
way of allowing the new system to share printers with the
old mainframe.
Somerset called in IDS to advise on
the creation of a local output management solution that would
not only handle output from any processor, but would provide
the council with an alternative to pre-printed stationery.
"We
now have tremendous flexibility
in the way we handle our
printing"
IDS supplied FunAsset's SpoolQ output
management system that takes input from multiple hosts, archives
the data for re-print capability, and automatically organises
the workload into relevant queues ready for output to the
printers.
The Council also took FunAsset's
FormServer module which allows users to design their own
departmental forms on their local Windows-based application
and have those designs stored on the SpoolQ system. This
produces a flexible and cost effective method of printing
at the point of use without the financial overhead of pre-printed
stationery.
The solution was exactly what the Council needed. "We
now have tremendous flexibility in the way we handle our
printing," says
Gary Dickins, Operations Manager for Somerset.
The local document composition facility has
proved especially useful for the police, whose IT services
are provided by Somerset County Council over a county-wide
network. It means that if someone in one of the police departments
wants to generate a purchase order, they can do it from their
desktop and submit it to the Somerset system.
The data is sent to SpoolQ which
selects the appropriate forms overlay and creates a PCL print
file that is automatically routed to the user’s printer,
complete with form.
It means there is no need for
pre-printed stationery and no need for the data centre
operations staff to be involved in the process. Data from
the mainframe also goes through SpoolQ, which strips out
the VME generated banner page and replaces it with Somerset
County Council's own banner page providing a standard across
all output.

Find Out More
Web Page: SpoolQ / FormServer
Telephone: + 44 (0)1460 55451
Email: info@idocsol.com
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