Inkjet & Digital Printing
Cloud Printing Made Easier by FedEx Office
Wednesday 01. August 2012 - Print Directly from Cloud Storage Accounts Box, Dropbox and Google Drive
FedEx Office loves a cloudy forecast. Cloud-based file storage allows people to synchronize and share files on different computers, and now FedEx Office is the first national retailer to provide an easier way to print them.
FedEx Office Print & Go and FedEx Office Print Online have increased their cloud coverage, but no umbrella will be necessary. These two award-winning products now integrate with cloud-based document storage services Box, Dropbox and Google Drive, which includes Google Docs. These integrations enable on-demand printing of files stored in the cloud online or at more than 1,800 FedEx Office stores nationwide.
“FedEx Office continues to lead the way in making it simple and convenient to print anywhere, anytime,” said Anthony Norris, vice president, Product and E-commerce Marketing for FedEx Office. “This integrated solution expands access to valuable documents presentations, brochures, flyers, oversize prints, signs and moreon demand.”
Print Through Copiers with Print & Go
With FedEx Office Print & Go, access and then print files from the cloud directly to copy machines. FedEx Office Print & Go also offers the ability to print from smartphones and USB flash drives. Last year, this easy-to-use technology received the “Most Innovative New Tech-Enabled Product” award from InformationWeek.
Place Cloud Print Orders Online
Similarly, access your cloud storage accounts through FedEx Office Print Online, and pick up printed filesfrom a FedEx Office store or choose to have them delivered to your door. Print Online features preview, archive and reordering features for Microsoft Word, PowerPoint and Adobe PDFs and more. Users can organize filesand sort by name, order date or price.
Stellar Team for Cloud Storage and Printing
Box, founded in 2005, provides a secure content sharing and collaboration platform for more than 120,000 businesses and 92 percent of the Fortune 500. Content on Box can be shared internally and externally within organizations, accessed across mobile platforms, and extended to more than 200 partner applications.
Dropbox allows users to bring their documents, photos, and videos anywhere and share them easily across any device. Dropbox, founded in 2007, has more than 50 million users in 175 countrieswith one billion files saved every 48 hours.
Google Drive launched in April 2012. More than 10 million people use Drive to create, share and keep files onlineincluding Google Docsso they can access them from any device.