Aplikasi Scan Printer Hp

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Gracia Bradshaw

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Aug 4, 2024, 3:32:42 PM8/4/24
to sacuninee
Ihave been using the HP Smart app on my Windows 10 computer to scan documents. A lot of the time the app crashes, but I was scanning in old children's work from my elementary school years through this app one night. I hit save and am not exactly sure where it saved to - I THOUGHT it saved to my school-linked OneDrive Account. I looked for the newer scanned documents and I did not see them. I was wondering if there was a chance that you could track my activity on HP Smart, or if you could tell me how to navigate the HP app/website to see my own history/saved documents, or even if the scanned documents were saved somewhere in the printer? I have an HP OfficeJet Pro 8720.

The files were over 20 years old, and I got rid of them after I saved them that night, so I can't even go back and re-scan everything. They were my entire childhood and I would do anything to get them all back. Please. What can I do to recover my childhood?


This article is for Google Workspace administrators who want to send email from devices or apps in their organization or domain. If you're a Gmail user who wants to send email from a device or app, contact your organization's administrator.


As an administrator, you can set up devices and apps to send email through Google Workspace. Set up Gmail to send email from common printers and scanners, including Canon, Epson, HP, Ricoh, and Xerox.


We recommend using the SMTP relay service to send email from devices or apps. The SMTP relay service authenticates messages with IP addresses, so devices and apps can send messages to anyone inside or outside of your organization. This option is the most secure.


If you connect using SSL or TLS, you can send email to anyone inside or outside of your organization using smtp.gmail.com as your SMTP server. This option requires you to authenticate with your Gmail or Google Workspace account and password when you set it up. The device uses those credentials every time it attempts to send email.


In this article we will show you how to find the driver/software needed for your operating system.



Whether you have a new printer or computer, an updated operating system, or for some reason your printer and computer are no longer able to communicate, updating or reinstalling your drivers may be helpful.

To utilize all functions of your printer/scanner, the Canon software for your model may be necessary. Instructions on how to find these are below.


If you are installing your printer for the first time, have updated your computer operating system, or the printer is unable to communicate with the computer, you will need to download the recommended driver in order to print.


Choose the Download button to the right of the software or driver file you wish to download. In most cases, you will see a driver that is recommended for you. Downloading and installing the MP Drivers or Full Driver and Software Package will help you set your printer up to print and scan.


It automatically stores every scan you capture on Adobe Document Cloud. And it easily integrates with Adobe Reader, which makes it a breeze to turn a piece of paper into a PDF that you can open on any device and share, sign, and comment on with others. It can also save scans as JPEG image files.


An optional Adobe Scan Premium subscription (at $10 per month) offers extra storage, saving as Word or PowerPoint files, and password protection. But the free version is likely enough for most people.


Senior staff writer Melanie Pinola covers home-office products, software, and services for Wirecutter. Prior to joining Wirecutter, she covered technology and productivity for more than a dozen years for sites such as Consumer Reports, Lifehacker, PCWorld, and Laptop Magazine.


As an added bonus, scans have searchable text you can copy and edit. And if you have multiple pages to scan at once, instead of single images in your camera roll, you can have multi-page PDFs organized in their appropriate folders in a cloud-storage service like Adobe Cloud, OneDrive, Google Drive, or iCloud.


Scans are easily shareable. All scans save as PDFs, and the app automatically uploads them to Adobe Document Cloud. You can also share a copy of any PDF via the Android or iOS sharing menu, or send someone a link to download the file from Adobe Document Cloud. You can export any scan as a JPEG, too.


OCR results are best in class. Lens performs OCR automatically on Word and PDF exports. The results we got in DOCX format were stellar: well formatted and accurate down to about a 6-point font, which was a bit better accuracy than we saw from Adobe Scan and Apple Notes.


You can scan quickly with one tap. When you open Google Drive, you should see a camera icon in the lower right corner on Android or a document icon on iOS. Tap that to enter the scanning screen.


Capturing batch or multipage scans differs slightly between operating systems. On Android devices, you go automatically to the preview screen and tap the plus (+) sign to add more pages; on iOS, you just replace the first sheet of paper with the next one to proceed with auto capture.


We got great, accurate OCR results down to 6-point text. Drive did a fair job of formatting the copy accordingly, adjusting for different sizes and italicized text. In some cases, though, it changed the color of the text to a light gray-green, perhaps because the document came in as grayscale instead of pure black and white.


Sharing to Google Drive is immediate. Like Adobe Scan with its cloud storage and Apple Notes with iCloud, Google Drive scans and saves directly to, well, itself. This makes it easily available on all of your devices, and it allows you to share the scan with others for comments.


To scan a document with Notes, simply create a new note (or open an existing one), click on the camera icon at the bottom of the screen, and choose Scan Documents. From this point, the scanning process is much like that on any other app: You can toggle between automatic and manual capture, change flash settings, and select one of four image filters.


Sharing to iCloud is automatic. Although especially security-conscious users may not like the fact that Notes automatically syncs scans across devices linked by the same Apple ID via iCloud, for most people we think this will be a plus.


If you need the widest range of OCR languages you can get: Consider ABBYY FineReader (iOS). It can recognize 183 human languages, eight formal languages (including programming languages and chemistry notation), and four constructed languages (like Esperanto). By comparison, Adobe Scan offers 19 OCR languages, Microsoft Lens has 30, and Apple Notes understands 24. Google Drive supports over 200 human languages, but not the formal languages ABBYY FineReader does.


SwiftScan (Android, iOS), a former upgrade pick, has the ability to automatically upload scans to your choice of more than a dozen cloud services (or your own FTP server). But it requires a paid subscription of $5 per month for Android users or $8 per month for iOS users for full functionality. And some of the features that originally made it stand out, such as smart file naming and folders organization, have been adopted by our picks. SwiftScan is also slower and more cumbersome than other apps, with constant nudges to reposition the camera before it would take a scan.


CamScanner (Android, iOS) has had a troubled history involving Chinese malware. And its interface is overly busy, with ads for other apps from the CamScanner team, plus several scanning modes that seem to be of limited usefulness (stuff like question sets, an ID photo maker, and QR codes).


We previously tested and dismissed two iOS-only apps. One was Prizmo, which had a hard-to-work-with interface plus poor auto-cropping performance, limited sharing options, and unreliable filters. The other was Scanner Pro, which had a nice interface and good performance with text documents, but it had poor results when scanning other types of media.


Ben Keough is the supervising editor for Wirecutter's working from home, powering, cameras, and hobbies and games coverage. He previously spent more than a decade writing about cameras, printers, and other office equipment for Wirecutter, Reviewed, USA Today, and Digital Camera HQ. After four years testing printers, he definitively confirmed that they all suck, but some suck less than others.


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