Accurate optical character recognition (OCR) is difficult to achieve. An OCR program must not only decipher text printed in different fonts, sizes, and alphabets, and convert it to editable text, but ...
I.R.I.S. Group, a publicly traded company (Euronext: IRI), market leader in Automatic Document Recognition (ADR), Electronic Document Management (EDM) and Optical Character Recognition (OCR) announced ...
I.R.I.S. Group is now shipping Readiris Pro 9 for the Mac, the latest version of the OCR (optical character recognition) software. Targeted to private and professional users who need to re-encode ...
The I.R.I.S. (Image Recognition Integrated Systems) Group on Monday announced the released of Readiris Pro 9 for the Mac. The latest version of the optical character recognition (OCR) software has a ...
* It retypes your paper documents and image files and converts your Adobe Acrobat PDF files in up to 107 languages! * It recreates the original document layout with incredible precision * It saves the ...
Readiris Pro 10 Corporate Edition offers a reasonably long list of new features, including bar-code and hand-printing recognition. More important, it did much better on our tests than earlier versions ...
Both come bundled with Readiris Pro 12 (for Mac OS and Windows) to process scans. Readiris is a OCR solution designed to save time when converting paper documents, PDFs or image files into editable ...
Readiris Corporate 12 ($399 direct) converts documents from scanned images into standard file formats with the least fuss (and the fewest options) of any major OCR program. In corporate and other high ...
Gitex, Dubai, November 20th 2006 - I.R.I.S. Group, a publicly traded company (Euronext: IRI), market leader in Automatic Document Recognition (ADR), Electronic Document Management (EDM) and Optical ...
Readiris Corporate 12 ($399 direct) converts documents from scanned images into standard file formats with the least fuss (and the fewest options) of any major OCR program. In corporate and other high ...
This post in a thread on the Programmer's Symposium will tell you what I'm trying to do. If you haven't already read the thread, this previous post will give you a recap of why I'm trying to do it.