Image: Abbyy Fotoreader
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Readers are reminded that the opinions expressed, and the results published in connection with reviews and/or laboratory test reports carried out on computing systems and/or related items are confined to, and representative of, only those goods supplied and should not be construed as a recommendation to purchase.

Abbyy Fotoreader

A handy tool for extracting text from photos and other images

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Price: £36
Manufacturer: Abbyy
Specifications: Windows 2000, XP or Vista • 1GHz processor • 512MB Ram • 1GB free hard disk • Five-megapixel camera • Supports BMP, DCX, JPEG, PCX, PNG and TIFF images
Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
Features: Features
Ease of use: Ease of use
Value for money: Value for money
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Verdict

Pros: Accurate and simple to use
Cons: Not ideal for business card scanning
Overall: Works well and integrates neatly with Office, but for converting cards stick to a dedicated scanner

Tom Royal, Personal Computer World 23 Dec 2008

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Abbyy’s Finereader is one of the best-known OCR tools for converting scanned documents into editable ones. This new product uses the same technology to capture text from photos.

Fotoreader integrates with Word and Excel, and can create PDF files containing both converted text and images taken from the source photo. The process of converting a photo is simple: choose how you want to export it (Word, Excel, PDF or Rich Text), pick an image, and after a few seconds the document will appear. If the results aren’t good enough you can switch to the Fotoreader window to make changes.

The Fotoreader window overlays the parts of the photo it thinks contain useful content, marking them green for text, red for images and blue for tables of information. The software does a good job of calculating which types are appropriate, but a few seconds spent tweaking these usually yields better results.

We found the software impressively accurate. A half-page PCW review was converted correctly, albeit with a few unnecessary italicisations. After correcting the software, which had mistaken the product screenshot for a table, it exported a usable copy of the review as a PDF file.

A feature table taken from a PCW lab test was converted reasonably into Excel, although two rows were merged into one and a few ticks became letters. Half a page of small white text on a red background was converted with just two minor errors, but when converting photos of business cards the @ signs in email addresses often turned into zeros.

A second tool, Screenshot Reader, allows you to select an area of the screen and convert it to text. This isn’t a product for everyone, and for converting business cards only we’d recommend a dedicated scanner, but it does its job at a reasonable price.


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