[blindlaw] New Scanning Option
McCarthy, Jim
JMcCarthy at NFB.ORG
Mon Jan 7 07:37:56 CST 2008
Well, because I hope Ronza is right, and because I respect her acumen, I
tried to look into this a bit. I have JAWS version 9 and the latest
adobe reader 8.1 or whatever. First, I looked in the JAWS help file
under acrobat but there was no mention that later versions of the reader
would offer to convert image files. Arguably it would be adobe and not
JAWS that would advertise this feature so I thought I would open an
image file that I have not been able to read without running it through
K1000 first. I was not offered a conversion option by adobe. I loaded
the adobe software before updating JAWS and I suppose that might make a
difference. I also wonder if you, Ronza are using the adobe free
software or if you actually own the acrobat professional product?
Perhaps you said and I missed it. At any rate, what Tim has mentioned
would be a great benefit to many of us I am sure, but perhaps one needs
the professional product to gain that advantage.
Jim McCarthy
-----Original Message-----
From: blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org]
On Behalf Of AZNOR99 at aol.com
Sent: Sunday, January 06, 2008 5:29 PM
To: blindlaw at nfbnet.org
Subject: Re: [blindlaw] New Scanning Option
Steve,
Are you using Jaws 8 or 9? I believe that's a requirement. Jaws 7 and
below does not convert the document. The prompt says something like
"This document appears to be an image. Would you like Adobe to run a
character scan to convert the image to text?"
I checked a box that tells Adobe to automatically convert all image
files to text, so I can't get the exact language of the prompt anymore.
Good luck.
Regards,
Ronza
In a message dated 1/6/2008 4:14:46 P.M. Central Standard Time,
steve.jacobson at visi.com writes:
Please explain this further because I think we're talking about two
different things in this thread. The ability to create PDF documents
that contains both the original image and the text has been around for
a while. I do not know of Acrobat supported it or not but it was an
option at least in OmniPage when used to create PDF's.
I just tried to read a document that was only an image a week ago or so
with Acrobat Reader 8.1.1. There was no option to extract text from
the document that I was aware of, but I was able to convert the
document to text using an OmniPage option so I know the text was
recognizable. This would be very handy if Adobe built in such a
feature, though. Would you describe where you were prompted for the
conversion option? Are you certain you were not hearing the "document
being processed" message that accompanies the normal extraction of
text? Maybe I missed something.
Best regards,
Steve Jacobson
On Sun, 6 Jan 2008 11:15:07 -0800, Russell J. Thomas, Jr. wrote:
>The version you want is Adobe 8.1. you can download it from the Adobe
>website.
>The advantage is that this program will convert certain PDF documents
>to text, documents which cannot be converted by the use of other
>programs. The disadvantage is that the document must be saved as a
>text file, thereby losing the formatting of the original document.
>-----Original Message-----
>From: blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org]
>On Behalf Of Ford, Tim (CDPH-OLS)
>Sent: Sunday, January 06, 2008 11:01 AM
>To: NFBnet Blind Law Mailing List
>Subject: Re: [blindlaw] New Scanning Option
>I have not experienced what you describe on my free Adobe Reader
>software, which is version 8 something. If the material is image
>only, then JAWS indicates that, but Adobe does not give me the option
>of converting to text. Perhaps there is some setting in the Adobe
>Reader software that needs to be turned on in order to get the prompt
>you describe? This would be wonderful news. While the virtual
>Freedom Import printer works well enough, converting through Openbook,
>this new approach sounds even better, and especially for large
>documents, where converting through Openbook can take awhile. So if
>you happen to know how to activate this feature, please let me know.
>Tim Ford
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org]
>On Behalf Of AZNOR99 at aol.com
>Sent: Sunday, January 06, 2008 10:53 AM
>To: blindlaw at nfbnet.org
>Subject: Re: [blindlaw] New Scanning Option
>Tim and All,
>
>I noticed this a few months ago. The newer versions of Adobe (8.0 and
>above) now have a feature that recognizes screen reading software, in
>my experience Jaws 8.0 and beyond. Once I download an image file,
>Adobe recognizes that there is text and asks if I want it to try to
>convert the file to OCR-enabled. Once I do, it very quickly
>processes the image and converts it. I've done this with briefs,
>receipts, and even exhibits. In fact, I've not used my virtual
>printer once since I upgraded to the new version of Adobe.
>
>This means that you don't necessarily need Adobe Professional on any
>machine. The standard free addition works wonderfully. It's made my
>work much easier and saved me a great deal of time.
>
>Regards,
>Ronza
>
>
>
>In a message dated 1/6/2008 12:46:02 P.M. Central Standard Time,
>Tim.Ford at cdph.ca.gov writes:
>I recently discovered, quite by accident, a new scanning option that
>may be of interest.
>My office recently installed Adobe Acrobat 8 Professional, Version
>8.0.0, on the computer with the scanner that I have been using to
>create PDF versions of briefs an other material I need to send to
>others electronically. I had my assistant scan in a brief that I was
>to file electronically.
>I pulled up the results, just to print it and have my assistant make
>sure all the pages were there. To my surprise, JAWS started
>automatically reading the document. I had my assistant check, and on
>the screen, and what we printed, was the typical image only format,
>with my scrawled signature and all.
>so apparently what this new version of Adobe has is the capacity to
>add a quite good optical character recognition of the text. The
>recognition quality was quite good, better than what I am used to with
>OpenBook.
>So the advantages of this is that:
>1. You have a PDF file with the actual intact original, so if there
>are any scan errors to figure out, you have the original there for a
>sighted person to review.
>2. You also have the actual original that you can print and/or send
>electronically to others. If the person you send it to does not use
>a screen reading program, then they will not notice any difference
>between what they see and any other Adobe PDF image only scan.
>3. If the recipient has a screen reader installed, then Adobe knows
>that, and automatically turns on the converted text imbedded
>information.
>Oh yes, and there is yet another neat aspect. Although the Adobe
>text conversion itself is not something you can edit, all you do is
>select whatever text you want, including using control plus a to
select all,
>and paste that in to a Word document. That gives you everything
that
>the Adobe text recognition picked up.
>For my Adobe reader software, I have the typical free reader version,
>so you do not need to have the Adobe Professional version installed
>except on the machine that has the scanner on it.
>I do not know the cost of the Adobe Professional version software.
>However, this is the typical software product that most offices now
>use, and is certainly something that would be affordable by most any
>office of any size.
>Sincerely,
>Tim Ford
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