You may also make special fax images for promotional or other purposes. Since the image is graphical, it may contain special fonts, pictures, or almost anything you can make on your Windows computer. The reproduction quality is limited by the resolution of the faxing standards in general and the receiving fax machine in particular. Drawings and character fonts generally reproduce well; pictures normally do not. As always, we suggest faxing yourself the image as a test prior to using it in production.
First, create an empty monochrome bitmap with pixel dimensions of 864 pixels wide by 1056 pixels high. These dimensions are very important; if the size is not exactly correct the image will not work. Also, be sure to select monochrome (one-bit) mode; color or grayscale will not work. If you wish to start with your existing letterhead, ask us to send you a copy of it in a form suitable for this use.
Using whatever functions are available in your program, insert text, pictures, or whatever into the bitmap. When you have finished, save it to your Windows hard disk. We strongly suggest using a filename that is not longer than eight characters. You should use Windows Explorer to check that the file size is exactly 114,110 bytes. If the file size is different, there is something wrong.
tcommbmp sample
change tcomm.tcbmp.sample (share nr)
bye
The final command "bye" will log you off the TARGET system. You should
then log back on as yourself. Now we need to set up the correspondence
between your image name and the TARGET image code you will be using.
Decide which image code you will be using; most likely you will be using one of the "wild card" image codes FXLHW1 through FXLHW9. Go to Back Office, System Controls, Fax Image Control Maintenance and enter the control code you just selected. Fill in the image file name (without the .bmp). If you are putting text from the TARGET system onto the image, you may need to experiment with the top and bottom margins; if so, these are specified in print lines which are roughly 1/6 inch each.