I do something similar but with the ADF scanner on my Brother printer. The scans automatically go to my server which processes them: deskew, combine with previous scan if it has the same amount of pages (because it might be me scanning the front pages first then the back pages), compress. After that, it's put on my NAS. I left the step of importing it to paperless manual, in that I have to copy or move the file from the Scan directory on my NAS to the Paperless ingest directory. This is so that I can first check if the scan came out okay.
He wants to embed himself in the history as some kind of victor. It's his sick phantasy to be presented in history books as a hero. That's why he is doing everything he can to irreversibly leave his legacy wherever he can. That's why he's building the Epstein ballroom. That's why he renames buildings and places after himself. That's why he wants to create new colonies. He's a narcissist.
64GB of RAM in this economy? That's fantastic! Unfortunately my motherboard is still on DDR3 and I would have to upgrade the whole computer which I can't afford so I actually have no use for this.
I do something similar but with the ADF scanner on my Brother printer. The scans automatically go to my server which processes them: deskew, combine with previous scan if it has the same amount of pages (because it might be me scanning the front pages first then the back pages), compress. After that, it's put on my NAS. I left the step of importing it to paperless manual, in that I have to copy or move the file from the Scan directory on my NAS to the Paperless ingest directory. This is so that I can first check if the scan came out okay.