1DollarScan ? the service that offers to digitize books and documents for as little as, yes, $1 ? is now promising an improved experience through a service called
Fine Tune. The company is a subsidiary of Bookscan Japan, and it
launched last August with the goal of bringing the Bookscan service to the U.S. market. Users send their books, documents, photos, and other printed material to the 1DollarScan office, which then handles the scan process. For a price of $1 per "set" (for books, one set means 100 pages; for documents, it's 10), you get a PDF that you can read on your smartphone or tablet. Don't send any physical copies that you're particularly attached to, however, because books will have their spines removed for scanning, and all of the printed materials will be recycled two weeks after the scan.
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