
It’s good to know if you were working of an image that look like a book being pushed down on the photocopier there’s options to cope with that.Īfter the image is scanned or loaded ABBYY FineReader spends a fair amount of time analysing the image for sections and areas. Thankfully there’s a whole host of options such as correcting perspective, cropping and adjusting colors to tweak according to the source. Not all sources are flat, pictures created equal and quite often theres some perspective skew which normally happens when you take a picture of a page with your phone.Īll of these work against OCR and getting decent results. Once the image has been imported Abbyy will go off and start doing it’s recognition thing.

#ABBYY FINEREADER 12 PROFESSIONAL MAC PRO#
I’ve tried FineReader Pro with a Cannon MG series printer which allows for wireless scanning and it worked flawlessly. Getting started is easy, either choose from an existing image or pull in one from your scanner. All I can say is thank god for FineReader Pro 12 for Mac. This could of taken many, many hours to type up and make sure that everything is spelt properly. Of course they didn’t have a text copy of the menu to hand. There’s 300 individual line items that would have needed typing if not for ABBYY FineReader. Poised with a rather unpleasant task of working on a clients website ABBYY has saved my sanity and hours upon hours of typing.Ī client decided they wanted their entire menu selection for their restaurant to made available on their website. I’ve had OCR apps for my iPhone and whilst theyre fine for a quick capture, this project needed something meatier. Exactly what’s happened to me this last week. Nothing makes for a better review than when it’s used in the real world for a practical purpose.
