Field2Base.com has just announced Forms2Base Lite, Pro, and Enterprise, a Tablet PC form automation solution enabling paper-based forms to be converted to a digital format and filled out using a ...
Companies big and small are trying to figure out how to safely return workers to the office. This app may be the solution. When Black & Veatch, the $3.7 billion global engineering, consulting and ...
John Hill of Allegiance Technology Partners just sent me a video demoing Field2Base, a end-to-end package for forms design, data collection, and communications for companies using Tablet PCs. Below is ...
Morrisville, NC /PRNewswire/ - Field2Base, a field service automation software company that helps businesses eliminate paper, recently hit 10 million successfully sent mobile forms resulting in about ...
MORRISVILLE, N.C., April 18, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- Field2Base, a field service automation software company, recently launched their new logo, new website, and onboarded new employees including their ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Intellinetics, Inc., (OTCQB: INLX), a cloud-based document solutions provider, has integrated its flagship IntelliCloud™ platform with Field2Base’s industry-leading ...
OVERLAND PARK, Kan.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--As return-to-work programs kick off across the United States, Black & Veatch announces the launch of COVOPERATE, an innovative new workforce management ...
The new partnership between Century Business Solutions and Field2Base allows credit card processing directly within Field2Base Mobile Forms™ application. Irvine, CA (PRWEB) - Tech-based payment ...
Field2Base has released ConstructConnect, its wireless tablet PC solution for the construction industry. ConstructConnect offers mobile performance and productivity tools for job site personnel, ...
“I’ve always dealt with systems that are real complex, but Field2base approaches a guy who may never have touched a computer in his life. It’s interesting to see how you take the technology from one ...
MORRISVILLE - Clutching a plastic device resembling a pen, David Lea's hand flowed across the computer screen in smooth, cursive arcs. In their wake, lines mimicking his hand's every move stood ...