13. How to print to a fax machine.
You can print to a fax machine with, or without, a modem.
13.1. Using a faxmodem
There are a number of fax programs out there that will let you fax
and receive documents. One of the most powerful is Sam Leffler's HylaFAX. It supports all sorts of things
from multiple modems to broadcasting.
SuSE ships a Java HylaFax client which allegedly works on any Java
platform (including Windows and GNU/Linux). There are also non-Java
fax clients for most platforms; GNU/Linux can almost certainly handle
your network faxing needs.
Also available, and a better choice for smaller installations, is efax, a simple program which sends and receives faxes. The
getty program mgetty can receive faxes using efax (and do voicemail or interactive logins).
13.2. Using the Remote Printing Service
There is an experimental service offered that lets you send an
email message containing something you'd like printed such that it
will appear on a fax machine elsewhere. Nice formats like
postscript are supported, so even though global coverage is
spotty, this can still be a very useful service. For more
information on printing via the remote printing service, see the Remote Printing WWW Site.
13.3. Commercial Faxing Services
A number of companies operate web-based faxing services. EFax, in particular, offers
free inbound faxes (to your own dedicated fax number, no less) via
email, and fax transmission for a fee. Other companies offer
similar services.