The Russian Post 112-EP form existed as a PDF and was inconvenient to fill in a regular workflow. It could be printed and filled by hand, but preparing a neat computer-filled document was much harder.
The form itself was complex: many fields, a strict grid, labels, and small input areas. Recreating it in Word or another editor so that everything matched the original PDF and printed correctly was fragile and time-consuming.
The tool solved the task in a simpler way: the user entered the required data in a web form, and the application placed it into the PDF template at the correct positions. The result could be printed immediately as a ready postal form.
Many people used the project because it removed a very specific everyday problem: there was no need to struggle with PDF editing, Word tables, and print alignment. Users filled fields on the site and received a clean prepared form.
For the bureau, this remains a useful early example of applied automation: a paper process was turned into a simple web interface, while the difficult PDF layout work stayed hidden inside the tool.