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Project is not as in ABBYY all the images and the OCR layer in one folder. So you can loose all your work in a minute. Only when you close the tool it asks if you want to save. OCR working screenĢ) There is no Save project option.
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Upper script numbers are not recognized as such. And in most cases it is clear enough, but still gets killed. It «clears» them as junk data, but when 2-4 Indian numbers come in a line, there is a good chance that after the 1st or 2nd a dot will come. No batch exportġ) It looses dots in references all the time. Activate the option Store in separate pages if every recognized page should be stored in a separate file on disk. To store the text of all recognized pages in one file, use the option «All pages» in the list Batch export. So no batch option makes it very hard to use. Maybe the batch export function is in HindiOCR (professional) for 199 Euros, but it is not there for SanskritOCR. Too many, instead of two columnsĢ) No batch export recognized text. So I have to keep the window open all the time and do monkey stuff. And is there Batch analysis of the same layout for let’s say 1000 pages at once? Now I recognize each page at once. Never seen it even in the earliest versions of ABBYY Fine Reader. It takes a few days to recognize a 200 page book, just pressing same shortcut on every page. It splits more frames than it should (instead of 2 columns it makes 7, but there never have been 7 column Sanskrit books). It does the simple things and does them badly. Oliver’s Sanskrit OCR is where ABBYY FineReader was before v.7.
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I know how to make things run, train templates. Indian quality printed IAST, good IAST - all kinds of them. I have been working with Sanskrit OCRing for 11 years now. There are enough ligatures than can make even a font designer go mad. Starting from 2010 the updated version is sold and it’s accuracy rate is around 95%. It can be still downloaded (but no long from the official website). Years ago Oliver’s software had a recognition rate 20-30% lower. I have heard Indian’s coders speaking (on Sanskrit conferences) long talks about how hard it is to make, and only this German guy made it possible. Oliver’s OCR tool is the best option for recognizing a Sanskrit text.