3D Fax
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				Revision as of 20:34, 28 July 2023 by Parchivist  (Talk | contribs)
3D Fax (also 3DFax) is a Windows program, developed for InfoImaging Technologies by sister Israeli company Fontech in the mid-1990s, for file transfer via fax (FTF). The program encodes a file into an InfoImage, which the user would then print and send via a fax machine or transmit directly from the computer using a fax modem. The recipient would then scan the transmitted image or receive it via a fax modem, and use 3D Fax to decode it back to its original binary form.
- v1.0 - 40kB per sheet of paper
 - v2.0 - up to 110kB per sheet of paper
 
Downloads for versions 1.5 and 2.5 (different formats) can be found on the archived product page
Further developed into Intacta.CODE
History
- In 1987 Oded Kafri invented the random grids which were utilized for 'Visual encryption' and later for printing binary data on papers (which is the basis of the two-dimensional barcode)
 - Software developed by Fontech Ltd. based in Beer Sheva, Israel to sell to the Israeli government to provide a way of securely sending data via fax
 - Fax-O-File originally licensed to AT&T as Surity
 - started InfoImaging Technologies, Inc. in 1994 in California (originally Palo Alto, then later Pleasanton) after winning Most Innovative Product at the 1993 CeBit for 3D Fax File
 - Rebranded/continued as Intacta.CODE in 1997
 
Links and references
- Wikipedia article
 - Article in 27 June 1995 PC Magazine
 - Ad from July 1995 PC Magazine
 - Review in 10 July 1995 InfoWorld
 - Press Release for v2.0 in 27 November 1995 Computerworld
 - Archived product page
 - Video review from 1997 The Computer Chronicles
 - History of Fontech and 3D Fax technology
 - Oded Kafri biography
 - Encryption of pictures and shapes by random grids by Oded Kafri and Eliezer Keren
 - Patent 4776013: Method and apparatus of encryption of optical images
 
