Perceptive Content captures documents in their native languages. However, the language you choose as your working interface for Perceptive Content may be separate from the source language of your document. This is just one of the reasons why Perceptive Content can run anywhere in the world if a company wants to capture its documents and enter data about those documents in a supported language.
Planning your Perceptive Content Language Pack implementation includes evaluating your workflow schema and determining whether it will span countries and languages. For example, a user can scan a French document in France, but another user can link the same French document in Germany. The user in Germany works within a German Perceptive Content interface to complete his or her tasks regardless of the French Perceptive Content interface used to capture the original document.
An integrated enterprise-level corporation with its headquarters in North America and shared service centers in other world regions (such as Germany or the Netherlands) may choose to have a dedicated Perceptive Content implementation in each location because the corporation localizes the internal workflow processes to that region. Users with the required privileges can log in to any worldwide Perceptive Content Server and receive reports and notifications, such as email, from these centers.
Additionally, a corporation can use LearnMode to capture content in a language different from the one used to run Perceptive Content. It is important, however, that any organization operating within multiple countries designate a common language in which to assign metadata to content.
Perceptive Content Language Pack supports the following Perceptive Content products and documentation.
| Products | Documentation |
|---|---|
| Perceptive Content Server | Product Help Files |
| Perceptive Content Client | Product Help Files |
For information about the environments and DBMSs supported in Perceptive Content Language Pack, refer to the sections for the supported products in the Perceptive Content Technical Specifications.