You may think of fax as an outmoded technology that was long ago supplanted by email, but countless people still send and receive faxes every day. In certain environments—notably medical and legal practices—it’s widely considered more reliable and more secure than email. If you can’t remember the last time you had to deal with faxing documents, feel free to skip this chapter. But if you do find a need to send or receive documents by fax, even if only occasionally, this final chapter explains how to do so without owning a fax machine or generating any paper.
I’m not shocked that people still send and receive faxes, but I am a bit baffled as to why anyone would want a fax machine, as such, in this day and age. Apart from the bulk of another device, there’s the infrastructure. Although a fax machine can sometimes share a landline with a telephone, doing so makes it more awkward for both the fax sender and the receiver—and if you give it a separate line, then that’s an extra monthly expense. Who needs all that bother?
Since you’re a Mac user, you have one or more excellent ways to receive faxes without having an extra box on your desk, and without generating extra paper. I’ll tell you about my favorite method first—the fax-to-email gateway—and then say a few words about using a modem.
A fax-to-email gateway works like this: You sign up with a provider and receive a private fax number. (Usually, you get to choose the area code—and sometimes the exchange too.) When a fax machine dials that number, a computer answers, receives the incoming fax, and saves the image as a digital file (perhaps a PDF or a multi-page TIFF). Then it sends you the file as an email attachment—or, in some cases, merely sends you an email notification and lets you download the image itself using a Web browser or desktop app.
As far as the sender is concerned, the experience is identical to sending a fax to an ordinary fax machine—they’ll never know that’s not what they did. But from your point of view, receiving a fax is just like getting an email message. There’s also a bonus: you can perform OCR on the incoming fax, just as you can on any scanned document (if the fax service provider doesn’t already do this for you)—and then archive it along with all your other searchable PDFs.
Oodles of companies offer services like this, and pricing plans vary—you may pay a monthly fee, a per-fax or per-page fee, or a combination of these. But the prices are invariably less than what you’d pay for an extra phone line plus paper, toner, maintenance, and electricity for a stand-alone fax machine. Here are but a few examples:
I have no particular recommendations—my sense is that these services are more alike than different—but I’ll just mention that I’ve been a satisfied jConnect customer myself for years.
All these companies also let you send outgoing faxes without any extra equipment—I discuss that topic in just a moment.
A fax machine essentially consists of a scanner, a modem, a simple computer, and a printer. So anyone with a scanner, a modem attached to their computer, and the right software can (in principle, at least) replicate the functionality of a fax machine without a separate box sitting on their desk.
I remember the time—not so long ago—when all Macs had built-in modems. As broadband Internet connections became more common than dial-up access, most of those modems went unused, and in 2005 Apple phased them out and began selling an external USB modem for those people who still needed them. But even the Apple USB Modem was discontinued in 2009, and support for that modem disappeared with 10.7 Lion.
Other manufacturers still sell Mac-compatible modems, and if your Mac is running OS X 10.11 El Capitan or earlier, you can configure them to be used for receiving (and sending) faxes by connecting to a physical phone line. Unfortunately, Apple removed support for fax modems starting with 10.12 Sierra (see Adam Engst’s TidBITS article Lost in Sierra: Five Missing Features for details), although you may still be able to use certain multifunction devices for faxing—you’ll have to check with the manufacturer to confirm.
To be blunt, I’d like to discourage you from using a fax modem even if you’re running an older version of macOS—I think it’s a cumbersome solution, and it has no future. But if you must use your Mac to receive incoming faxes, connect your modem and then do the following:
That’s it—your Mac is now a fax machine. (But read on for information about using it to send faxes.)
Just as you can use either a gateway or a modem to receive faxes, you can use the same two techniques to send outgoing faxes. The process isn’t exactly analogous, in that you’re generally starting with a computer-generated document, but it’s still simple.
As I mentioned earlier, every fax-to-email gateway also works in the other direction—it lets you send faxes from your computer, although the exact procedure may or may not involve email. For example:
And, many services offer some combination of these approaches.
In general, you can use any common document type for outbound faxes—for example, Word (.doc or .docx) or PDF. And, if you need to fax a document that you have only in paper form, no problem: scan it and then send the resulting file. I say more about occasions for doing this sort of thing in Sign Documents without Paper, earlier.
A few pages back, in Use a Modem for Incoming Faxes, I explained how to set up a Mac to use an external modem to receive faxes (noting that Apple dropped support for the Apple USB Modem in Lion, and removed fax modem support entirely in Sierra).
Once you’ve followed the setup steps I provided earlier, you’re also set up to send outgoing faxes. Again, I advise against doing this if you can use an email-to-fax gateway instead. But to send a fax through your modem, follow these steps:
OS X “prints” your document to the recipient’s fax machine.