Discussion:
Epson Perfection 1250 & OCR
(too old to reply)
epigram
2005-03-29 22:48:01 UTC
Permalink
I've got an Epson Perfection 1250 and I need to scan some text documents and
then edit them in Word. I downloaded the Windows XP drivers for this, but
couldn't find any actual software that I would use to scan documents. I can
use, what appears to be, the built-in support XP has for scanners, but I can
only scan to image files basically. I really need a way to scan using OCR
to create text files that I can edit (e.g. in Word 97). Any ideas how to do
this, or do I have to go buy software to accomplish my goal?

Any help would be much appreciated. Thanks!
Dances With Crows
2005-03-29 23:55:56 UTC
Permalink
["Followup-To:" header set to comp.periphs.scanners.]
On Tue, 29 Mar 2005 17:48:01 -0500, epigram staggered into the Black Sun
Post by epigram
I've got an Epson Perfection 1250 and I need to scan some text
documents and then edit them in Word.
Why limit yourself to MS Word? http://openoffice.org/ . Free speech,
free beer. It's about 110M in size, though.
Post by epigram
I can use, what appears to be, the built-in support XP has for
scanners, but I can only scan to image files basically. I really need
a way to scan using OCR to create text files that I can edit (e.g. in
Word 97).
The documents that MS Word produces by default are *not* "text files".
They're Microsoft's proprietary invention, and they can and do contain a
bunch of stuff other than text. Take a look at a .DOC file and a .TXT
file in a hex editor and you'll see what I mean.
Post by epigram
Any ideas how to do this, or do I have to go buy software to
accomplish my goal?
Unfortunately, there aren't any Free OCR programs that can do decent
recognition right now. GNU OCRad is pretty sad, and it doesn't even
have an interface unless you count kooka. Sometimes, scanner
manufacturers ship scanners with a CD containing limited versions of
popular proprietary OCR packages. If you don't have one of those CDs,
ISTR hearing something about 'DozeXP having some kind of rudimentary OCR
capability built-in. I can't verify that since all I have here is 2K
and I'd have to reboot to use that. Try Googling and digging around on
your system.

If you really need good OCR, there are several commercial packages
available. Abbyy Finereader gets a lot of good press. Expervision
Typereader and Caere Omnipage are OK, but some people say that
Finereader works better. YMMV. If you have good original images
(typeset, high-contrast, few speckles, scannable at 300 DPI
black-and-white, no tiny/gigantic/broken/mangled type) then any of those
engines should do a decent job. No OCR engine is perfect though. HTH,
--
Matt G|There is no Darkness in eternity/But only Light too dim for us to see
Hire me! http://crow202.dyndns.org/~mhgraham/resume/
Programmers are playwrights, Computers are lousy actors,
Users are vicious drama critics, BOFHen burn down theatres!
m***@dsl.pipex.com
2005-03-30 17:51:11 UTC
Permalink
Post by epigram
I've got an Epson Perfection 1250 and I need to scan some text documents and
then edit them in Word. I downloaded the Windows XP drivers for this, but
couldn't find any actual software that I would use to scan documents. I can
use, what appears to be, the built-in support XP has for scanners, but I can
only scan to image files basically. I really need a way to scan using OCR
to create text files that I can edit (e.g. in Word 97). Any ideas how to do
this, or do I have to go buy software to accomplish my goal?
Any help would be much appreciated. Thanks!
If you have Micros**t Office, it comes with something called Micros**t
Office Document Imaging.

It is a stripped down version of PaperPort. Does OCR.

MK
David Chien
2005-04-01 21:30:48 UTC
Permalink
Post by epigram
only scan to image files basically. I really need a way to scan using OCR
to create text files that I can edit (e.g. in Word 97). Any ideas how to do
this, or do I have to go buy software to accomplish my goal?
If it's not included with the scanner software, then you'll have to
buy an OCR program, such as OmniPage Pro (which works pretty darn well).
Keep in mind these are machines reading text, so you'll always get
some errors you have to manually correct. Still, you can process a
several hundred page book scan in about 1/2 an hour with Omnipage since
the error rates are pretty low.

Here, if you're doing large volume text to OCR scans, you've really
bought the wrong scanner. You'll need at least a Canon DR-2080C
continuous feed duplex scanner that'll push through 20+ppm, and works
great at gobbling up hundreds of pages per hour (like it does here)
without a single jam. Highly recommended for this purpose!

=)
Terry
2005-04-04 00:51:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by David Chien
Post by epigram
only scan to image files basically. I really need a way to scan using OCR
to create text files that I can edit (e.g. in Word 97). Any ideas how to do
this, or do I have to go buy software to accomplish my goal?
If it's not included with the scanner software, then you'll have to
buy an OCR program, such as OmniPage Pro (which works pretty darn well).
Keep in mind these are machines reading text, so you'll always get
some errors you have to manually correct. Still, you can process a
several hundred page book scan in about 1/2 an hour with Omnipage since
the error rates are pretty low.
Here, if you're doing large volume text to OCR scans, you've really
bought the wrong scanner. You'll need at least a Canon DR-2080C
continuous feed duplex scanner that'll push through 20+ppm, and works
great at gobbling up hundreds of pages per hour (like it does here)
without a single jam. Highly recommended for this purpose!
=)
The latest version of Vuescan V82.02 can do OCR, just tried it. Will
wonders never cease.

Loading...