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        Atalasoft Offers New View of SharePoint
        
        
        
			- By Kathleen Richards
- February 12, 2009
        Atalasoft Inc. is launching a SharePoint plug-in based on the  document imaging tooling in its latest SDK. The company released version 7.0 of  its flagship toolkit DotImage for .NET in January. 
DotImage v7.0 contains AJAX-enabled controls and document  and photo imaging APIs for ASP.NET WebForms, Windows Forms and Windows  Presentation Foundation. The latest release extends document viewing and  annotation capabilities in WPF and on the Web. New AJAX-enabled controls let  users draw vector-based annotations -- freehand, polygon and lines -- on document  images directly within their browsers, without requiring plug-ins such as Java  applets, Adobe Flash or Microsoft Silverlight.
Better support for all formats on the Web was a key goal of  this release, according to Lou Franco, Atalasoft's director of engineering.  DotImage v7.0 offers enhanced support for DICOM medical imaging and Web-based PDFs  with new archiving capabilities (PDF/A), vector-based drawing, and printing on  the fly. 
New Visual Studio 2008 extensions to build out projects are  now available including a wizard for building Web-based projects in VB.NET and  C#. The SDK also offers a series of videos to educate developers about how to  use the tooling to integrate document imaging technology into applications and  enterprise content management systems. 
Document Imaging in  SharePoint
  Atalasoft used DotImage v7.0 and Visual Studio 2008 to build  a document viewing app on top of SharePoint. Vizit SP enables SharePoint users  to annotate documents (PDF, TIFF, .DOC), view thumbnails, and index or clean up  scanned OCR images. 
"We came up with this product because we found that a  number of our customers were doing things in SharePoint using our viewer,"  said Rutherford Wilson, Atalasoft's director of product development.
With Vizit SP, end users can annotate content and save it to  the document repository without modifying the source information, Wilson explained. Vizit  uses the versioning that is already stored in SharePoint. 
"The annotations are stored in a separate list as an  XML so they are not accessible to metadata as of yet," said Wilson, who  expects the 2.0 version to provide that capability.
The SharePoint document viewer can also be used to index  multiple images or clean up OCR documents. The explorer enables users to  navigate through the SharePoint hierarchy and access other SharePoint sites or  document repositories. 
SharePoint lends itself to document imaging in part because  it is a server-side platform that enables DotImage's "zero footprint"  viewer for multiple formats, said Franco, who offers his "top  considerations for document imaging in SharePoint" in his blog.
"What Microsoft did with SharePoint is make it possible  for any ASP.NET developer to extend SharePoint by providing a very clear cut  API for how to develop pages and content in ASP.NET," Franco said. "So SharePoint in a lot of  ways is an extension of the ASP.NET model and it fully supports Web controls  that support that."
"There are definitely gotchas," he added,  especially around deployment. "How you actually get your finished product  into every SharePoint smoothly is definitely the most interesting concern for  people." 
Still largely a departmental play in many organizations,  SharePoint remains a hot button among developers and IT. According to Forrester  Research, which surveyed 1,017 software decision makers in North America and Europe in late 2007, roughly 65 percent of organizations planned  to invest in team collaboration software in 2008, and 74 percent were considering  investments in document management software. Microsoft's content management  software was the top choice among those surveyed at 23 percent, followed by IBM  with 8 percent and Oracle with 5 percent. SharePoint, which supports both  collaboration and document management, is the basis of Microsoft's enterprise  content management strategy, according to Forrester.
Vizit  Previewer, which offers the  thumbnail document preview functionality, is free. The full-fledged Vizit SP  is licensed per server and per  client with a minimum purchase of 1 server and 25 CALs for $4,625. Vizit requires Windows Server 2003 or Windows  Server 2008, and Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 or Microsoft SharePoint Server  2007. 
The DotImage 7.0 licensing fee structure is available here. The SDK   supports Visual  Studio 2003 and Visual Studio 2005, in addition to Visual Studio 2008.    
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kathleen Richards is the editor of RedDevNews.com and executive editor of Visual Studio Magazine.