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Canada Post ready for Electronic Post Office send off

Canada Post ready for Electronic Post Office send off

By:  Rebecca Maxwell  On: 29 Jul 1999 For: Channelworld India 

Neither rain, nor sleet, nor the electronic age will keep the mail from your door - or your computer.

After three-and-a-half years of research and development, Canada Post Corp. will launch its Electronic Post Office (EPO) this summer and become the first national postal organization in the world to deliver mail via the Internet.

"Canada post recognized…that over the next five years there is going to be a migration from paper-based communication, particularly in the letter mail portion of the business, to electronic types of communication, whether it's for bill presentment or supply chain management," said Bill Robertson, general manager of electronic commerce for Canada Post in Ottawa.

Because of this transition, Canada Post can no longer rely solely on the "snail mail" approach. Robertson admits that "yes, it was a critical business decision as to whether we should be in this business." But after much research and review, at the end of the day, it was decided "this was a natural extension of our business."

The EPO will allow Canadian businesses and consumers to receive and view all types of mail on the Internet, including bills, correspondence, advertising, statements, government information and electronic forms, according to Canada Post.

Large volume mailers, or businesses such as utility companies or banks, who sign up for the EPO service can send bills, inserts, advertising and more on-line. Consumers, who get an electronic post office box when registered with the service, can decide how and what they wish to receive from those various senders.

The crown corporation and their partner Cebra Inc., a subsidiary of the Bank of Montreal, have formed additional alliances with Scotiabank, for Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) technology, Boulder, Colo.-based NETdelivery Corp. for electronic delivery management, JetForm, and Toronto-based Xenos Group for the provision of sender input/output technology.

According to Robertson, it was important that the technology be as "simple, inexpensive and non-intrusive as possible" for large volume mailers who sign up with the EPO service. "We recognize that complicated technology installations, particularly in light of year 2000 issues, really wasn't going to be acceptable to large business."

For this reason, Robertson said the decision was made to use the print output streams of large businesses, whether it be billing runs or large batch applications, that are run frequently anyway.

Xenos Group's software product, Documorph, handles multiple print inputs including IBM AFP, Xerox Metacode and line mode data and re-engineers documents so they can be displayed in HTML. A built-in option allows other incoming file types and output to other file formats.

Graham Barker, vice-president of international sales for the Xenos Group in Richmond Hill, Ont., said Documorph provides "the ability to take in the traditional print stream formats or data stream formats that are coming from these large volume mailers out of their legacy applications and then process that…(into) HTML versions of those documents, retaining the highest amount of fidelity to the original printed document as possible."


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Rebecca Maxwell Rebecca Maxwell is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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