• Computers are useless, they can only give answers.
    (Pablo Picasso).

Creazione-sitiLarge quantities of pictures can often make a file inaccessible, and the information generally impossible to find.

For many years optical filing of documents and images has made it possible to create efficient archives, that can give answers to even highly complex interrogations.

And offer immediate access to the data as well as the images they contain.

There are applications in many sectors that concern:
  historical archives photograph archives
  press releases cataloguing Works
  technical designs
manuals
which can unquestionably benefit from an optical-filing system.

DIGIVIDEO has created applications both in document filing and photography. It has provided archiving systems bringing together the technologies of various producers, and creating applications ad hoc.

We are thus in a position to offer services for:
 Recording audio and/or video material coming  from analogical or digital sources.
 Storing  on optical disks such as CDs, DVDs, Worms, or Videodisks.
 Creation and/or adding of software  for managing the archive.

Services offered range from a simple transfer of images or video sequences, to the assembly of finished products - with the necessary support software when needed.
The types of support offered are: transfer of 35mm, 8mm films, Video VHS, S-VHS, miniDV, video 8, video hi8 and video CD - compatible with most home video DVD readers, or on computer cd-roms.

INFO

For more detailed information and offers, you can  contact us directly  or fill out a  special form : you will have an answer in just a few hours.

Law 24/98 of 30 July 1998 ascribes the same legal value to the a digital document as it does to the original, in the explanatory note accompanying that resolution, it is written: "...the desire was to allow replacement of the paper document by one from an optical support, deeming the latter equally suitable for providing a guarantee of fidelity to the original, in observance of the rules provided for in the Resolution.

Subsequently, resolution 42/2001 of 13 December 2001 was drawn up. Its purpose was to establish technical rules for the reproduction and storing of documents on an optical support fit to guarantee that the digital documents conform to the originals.

Art 3 states:
The process of keeping digital documents, including computer documents, takes place through storage on optical supports and is completed by affixing the time reference and digital signature on the combined documents by the person in charge of keeping them, who attests to the proper carrying out of the process.