How Many GlobalCapture Cores Do I Need?

What Is A Core License?

A GlobalCapture Core license is essentially allotting physical or logical processing cores on a server to GlobalCapture to use openly and freely at its discretion. Cores are used for image manipulation, such as PDF Conversion or Image Cleanup, as well as used during data extraction and classification. Environments utilizing heavy OCR will likely need to increase their core count to maintain speed as their processing burden increases. Image Processing is CPU-heavy, and additional cores help to spread the burden across multiple processors, helping clients with a heavy document processing overhead maintain an expected level of document throughput. Additional cores can be licensed at any time and the update to the core licensing can be made very rapidly. Please contact your RSM in regards to any evolving processing needs.

Estimated GlobalCapture Throughput

(Note that these are rough estimates only, for GlobalCapture v2.0.2. Customer documents, hardware, software, and connectivity can  cause throughput to vary widely.)

Cores

4 Hours

8 Hours

Month

Year

Single

500 pages

1000 pages

20,833 pages

250,000 pages

Dual

1000 pages

2000 pages

41,666 pages

500,000 pages

Tri

1500 pages

2000 pages

62,500 pages

750,000 pages

Quad

2000 pages

4000 pages

83,333 pages

1,000,000 pages

Eight

4000 pages

8000 pages

166,666 pages

2,000,000 pages

Twelve

6000 pages

12,000 pages

250,000 pages

3,000,000 pages


Server Processing Burden

Please be aware that “Cores” in the context of GlobalCapture may refer to a physical or logical processor. What this means is that at any point in time, GlobalCapture has as many cores as you have licensed to devote purely to image processing. GlobalCapture can be scaled nearly infinitely with the addition of extra engines and cores, but the burden of processing lies on the physical processors. What this means for the server or virtual machine that GlobalCapture is housed on is GlobalCapture will indiscriminately use up to 100% of it's allotted cores, with no regard for the other applications or processes running on the server. This should be kept in mind when designing or scoping out an environment. Additional cores in excess of the cores allocated to GlobalCapture may be suggested to maintain system stability of the capture server.