Yeah - some of the modems were.  IIRC: Sam Leffler  (sam "usual email punctuation" errno.com) did the original FlexFax SW and we had a couple kicking around.  My memory is that the modems that could also support Fax in those days, sucked at UUCP, so most of us did want to dedicate a phone line to one of them. 

Also the scanner interface was not very easy.   We tried to replace an HP fax machine with SW, including a scanner and fax modem, but it was not very satisfactory for the non-technical types.

I don't have any memory of "large-scale" use however.   What was cool was some of the printers knew how to use PS as the format, instead of the 1860's style scanning [yes, FAX was invented for the US civil war and originally ran over telegram lines - the current format is just a super-set of the old mechanical scan system from those days].

On Sun, Jan 4, 2015 at 12:50 PM, Dave Horsfall <dave@horsfall.org> wrote:
On Sun, 4 Jan 2015, Cory Smelosky wrote:

> Were VAXen ever used to send/receive faxes large-scale?  What software
> was used and how was it configured?

I don't think fax modems were even invented then, were they?

I remember using FlexFax (then renamed to Hylafax) quite a lot, sometimes
for nefarious purposes (it was trivial to fake the CSID)...

--
Dave Horsfall DTM (VK2KFU)  "Bliss is a MacBook with a FreeBSD server."
http://www.horsfall.org/spam.html (and check the home page whilst you're there)
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