![]() ![]() The Corporate version of ABBYY FineReader 11, which I tested, expands on the Professional version by including a hot-folder feature that lets you simply drop files into a folder that you designate, and then wait a few moments while FineReader runs invisibly in the background, automatically performing OCR on the dropped files. I’ve used it for years in preference to all alternatives, and the latest version is its best by far. And if you often need to copy text from images found on the Web, you need to get the most accurate possible text out of images on your disk or documents that you’ve fed to a scanner, or you want to convert a scanned document into HTML or into the ePub format used by e-readers, the app that gets those jobs done best, too, is ABBYY FineReader. But if you need OCR that can handle difficult and massive jobs like converting complex tables into usable spreadsheets, or scanning a hundred-year-old book into a searchable PDF, or getting accurate text out of pages printed with weird-looking typefaces, you need ABBYY FineReader 11. Why upgrade to ABBYY FineReader 11 ($279.99 direct Professional Edition $118.99)? After all, your scanner probably came with an optical character recognition (OCR) app on a CD, and that app is probably good enough for everyday OCR jobs like scanning business cards, magazine clippings, invoices, and old letters. ![]()
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