This is why HP begins most of the user documentation with a warning to resist using the camera arm as a handle. The panel on the device where the camera is mounted is also designed to be flexible making it even more obvious that the camera arm is not a handle. Because of this, the camera arm is designed to be light enough that it feels too weak to lift the device. It looks so much like a handle that one has to resist the temptation to lift the MFP with it. The TopShot camera arm looks like a handle. Since the position of the camera arm is critical to the success of capturing images, it has a detent in the fully lifted position. The arm is just the right length to allow the camera to aim and focus properly. The TopShot camera is placed at the end of an arm that the user must lift before scanning. Note: the document in Figure 4 is a screenshot of the scan results. Figure 4 shows the same document scanned using this software. Readiris Pro Software that comes with the MFP scans documents through TWAIN and converts the text into searchable and editable text. The surface of the scanning platform is engineered to reduce shadows and to reflect a specific shade of white, which TopShot identifies and removes from the final image. TopShot also removes the background behind the object to make the image stand out and to eliminate the need to edit the image in a separate step. HP developed new technologies for TopShot to address these challenges.
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