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#1
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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! |
#2
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----- Original Message -----
From: "epigram" Newsgroups: microsoft.public.word,microsoft.public.word.docman agement,microsoft.public.word.general Sent: Tuesday, March 29, 2005 5:51 PM Subject: Word, OCR and Epson 1250 Scanner 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! "Most" scanners, (including your Epson) come with their own OCR software http://www.epson.com/cgi-bin/Store/P...2 8&category= As a rule, Word will not allow the integration of the scanning software from most scanners. WordPad however, will work just fine. Open WirdPad and under FILE, select ACQUIRE. Scan and OCR your text, then save as RTF. Close WordPad, Open Word and contiue as your desire. |
#3
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If your scanner did not come with an OCR software option, you will have to
add one, which means buying software. OCR is quite a challenge for software so the perfect OCR product doesn't exist. Finereader is as good as it gets. With lesser products, you would probably be best advised to scan as plain text and re-edit in Word. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org epigram wrote: 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! |
#4
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"f your scanner did not come with an OCR software"
Hey Graham, I've had three scanners (one even ran on DOS) over as twelve year period. NONE came without OCR software. The problem with all these scanner inquiries is that Word fails to accept or recognize the scanners OCR software. Word97 did not have this problem and installed the OCR option from two of the previous scanners. Word2000 would NOT install either of the two latest scanner OCR options. |
#5
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I don't know what OCR software came with my HP scanner. I found it
surprisingly accurate (at the editable flowed text setting), but I apparently have to direct the output to WordPad and then paste into Word. sigh -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "lostinspace" wrote in message m... "f your scanner did not come with an OCR software" Hey Graham, I've had three scanners (one even ran on DOS) over as twelve year period. NONE came without OCR software. The problem with all these scanner inquiries is that Word fails to accept or recognize the scanners OCR software. Word97 did not have this problem and installed the OCR option from two of the previous scanners. Word2000 would NOT install either of the two latest scanner OCR options. |
#6
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----- Original Message -----
From: "Suzanne S. Barnhill" Newsgroups: microsoft.public.word.docmanagement Sent: Wednesday, March 30, 2005 9:11 AM Subject: Word, OCR and Epson 1250 Scanner I don't know what OCR software came with my HP scanner. I found it surprisingly accurate (at the editable flowed text setting), but I apparently have to direct the output to WordPad and then paste into Word. sigh -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "lostinspace" wrote in message ... "f your scanner did not come with an OCR software" Hey Graham, I've had three scanners (one even ran on DOS) over as twelve year period. NONE came without OCR software. The problem with all these scanner inquiries is that Word fails to accept or recognize the scanners OCR software. Word97 did not have this problem and installed the OCR option from two of the previous scanners. Word2000 would NOT install either of the two latest scanner OCR options. Hey Suzanne, Scanning a bit off-topic for this Word NG, however there are so many scanning inquires as to how Word users are looking for editable text in their scans rather than the "images that Word accepts", some discussion and links are loooonnnngggg overdue. I'm not sure how many articles and documents that I've scanned? It easily exceeds 10,000. My most recent scanner a $50 purchase and works just fine. Omnipage 9.0 came with this scanner and I find it quite effective. I have found that regular cleaning of the glass on both sides (even when brand new there was a foggy residue on the underside of the glass) make OCRing more effective. The quality of the paper you are scanning determines effective OCR as well. I've found on some bad quality and older papers that if you go to an office supply that had good quality copy machines and make photo copies, than your scans are more effective than from the older originals. There has been a really good website about scanning that has existed for at least eight years: http://www.scantips.com/ http://www.scantips.com/basics04.html http://www.scantips.com/basics4c.html Wayne Fulton has done a superb job in providing assitance for others. There is also a good NG for scanning, where folks are quite experienced. comp.periphs.scanners Those archives may be viewed at http://groups-beta.google.com/group/...riphs.scanners |
#7
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Thanks for the reminder about ScanTips, which I haven't looked at in
years--probably need to again now that I'm more experienced in scanning. My first experience with OCR (with my first scanner and some "lite" version of OmniPage IIRC) was so ludicrous that I never tried again (I'm a very fast typist). I have definitely found, though, that photocopying can often improve the accuracy of scanned images, some of which don't show up at all when you try to scan the original (especially if it has a colored background). The fogging under the glass bothers me but so far hasn't seemed to make much difference in the quality of the scanned image, so I haven't gotten around to doing anything about it. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "lostinspace" wrote in message om... ----- Original Message ----- From: "Suzanne S. Barnhill" Newsgroups: microsoft.public.word.docmanagement Sent: Wednesday, March 30, 2005 9:11 AM Subject: Word, OCR and Epson 1250 Scanner I don't know what OCR software came with my HP scanner. I found it surprisingly accurate (at the editable flowed text setting), but I apparently have to direct the output to WordPad and then paste into Word. sigh -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "lostinspace" wrote in message ... "f your scanner did not come with an OCR software" Hey Graham, I've had three scanners (one even ran on DOS) over as twelve year period. NONE came without OCR software. The problem with all these scanner inquiries is that Word fails to accept or recognize the scanners OCR software. Word97 did not have this problem and installed the OCR option from two of the previous scanners. Word2000 would NOT install either of the two latest scanner OCR options. Hey Suzanne, Scanning a bit off-topic for this Word NG, however there are so many scanning inquires as to how Word users are looking for editable text in their scans rather than the "images that Word accepts", some discussion and links are loooonnnngggg overdue. I'm not sure how many articles and documents that I've scanned? It easily exceeds 10,000. My most recent scanner a $50 purchase and works just fine. Omnipage 9.0 came with this scanner and I find it quite effective. I have found that regular cleaning of the glass on both sides (even when brand new there was a foggy residue on the underside of the glass) make OCRing more effective. The quality of the paper you are scanning determines effective OCR as well. I've found on some bad quality and older papers that if you go to an office supply that had good quality copy machines and make photo copies, than your scans are more effective than from the older originals. There has been a really good website about scanning that has existed for at least eight years: http://www.scantips.com/ http://www.scantips.com/basics04.html http://www.scantips.com/basics4c.html Wayne Fulton has done a superb job in providing assitance for others. There is also a good NG for scanning, where folks are quite experienced. comp.periphs.scanners Those archives may be viewed at http://groups-beta.google.com/group/...riphs.scanners |
#8
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"The fogging under the glass bothers me"
It should :-)) The fogging residue is actually caused by the decomposition of the plastic case :-)) |
#9
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![]() "epigram" wrote in message news:1112135676.aadc7f8c50c4e48a8905ea88a4dfa624@b ubbanews... 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! The scanner should have its own software, which will probably include Abby OCR. Doesn't yours? There should be a disk. Rob Graham |
#10
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Graham Mayor wrote:
If your scanner did not come with an OCR software option, you will have to add one, which means buying software. OCR is quite a challenge for software so the perfect OCR product doesn't exist. Finereader is as good as it gets. With lesser products, you would probably be best advised to scan as plain text and re-edit in Word. Correct |
#11
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This fellow says OCR capability is included with the scanner.
Reviewer: Lee Hower (San Jose, CA United States) - See all my reviews I'm quite pleased with the Epson 1250, I've primarily used the scanner for archiving old photos. For a scanner (in that price range), it provides excellent image quality at 1200x2400 dpi. Setup w/ Epson software and USB connection was a breeze, literally taking about a minute. The included software is quite good for most beginner to intermediate users. In addition to TWAIN capture software it includes OCR capability (text recognition), an image editor, and web picture hosting. More advanced users will make better use of Photoshop and other software, but you still can't beat the scan quality at this price point. Also, hardware seems to be fairly rugged and the scanner has small footprint and very slim profile. I compared various scanners in a retail store, the only ones that have a slimmer profile are the Canon CanoScan models (which cost about twice as much for 1200x2400 scan resolution). http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg...17605?v=glance "epigram" wrote in message news:1112135676.aadc7f8c50c4e48a8905ea88a4dfa624@b ubbanews... 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! |