That is a function of the software, not the scanner. I use Cardscan
(Corex), it both saves the image and OCRs the contents. There is really
no reason not to OCR the contents (the OCR is very good, and very fast
-- just 2 or 3 seconds, literally). You really do need to OCR if only
to be able to do searches to find the card (may not sound like a big
deal, but my card database has thousands of cards).
By the way, with Cardscan, you can use any flatbed twain scanner, and
more to the point, you can lay 8 cards on the scanner and scan them all
at once (one note, you need a black, not a white background). Cardscan
will delineate them into separate cards and save them as if they had
been scanned individually.
Thornhill wrote:
> Can anyone recommend one?
>
> Are there ones that do not OCR the card but just save an image of the
> card in a searchable database? That's all I really need.
>
On Jun 19, 7:06 am, Thornhill <seth.l...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Can anyone recommend one?
>
> Are there ones that do not OCR the card but just save an image of the
> card in a searchable database? That's all I really need.
I also have a piece of black paperboard to use as a backing when bleed
through is a problem. And I also don't understand why white is the most
common background. I had a Microtek scanner that did have a black
background, however.
Talker wrote:
> On Wed, 20 Jun 2007 00:14:22 -0400, Barry Watzman
> <WatzmanNOSPAM@neo.rr.com> wrote:
> .
> (one note, you need a black, not a white background).
>
>
> I never understood why scanners are white underneath the top
> cover. All of my scanners tops have been white, and since that causes
> bleed through on documents, a black background was needed so I made
> one out of foamboard.
> I cutout a piece of black foamboard that was the same size as the
> scanner's glass, then used heavy duty tape to tape a metal handle to
> the back of it. The handle gives it weight, and makes it easy to lift
> off the glass.
> Is there some reason scanner's use white under the lid?
>
> Talker
On Wed, 20 Jun 2007 00:14:22 -0400, Barry Watzman
<WatzmanNOSPAM@neo.rr.com> wrote:
..
(one note, you need a black, not a white background).
I never understood why scanners are white underneath the top
cover. All of my scanners tops have been white, and since that causes
bleed through on documents, a black background was needed so I made
one out of foamboard.
I cutout a piece of black foamboard that was the same size as the
scanner's glass, then used heavy duty tape to tape a metal handle to
the back of it. The handle gives it weight, and makes it easy to lift
off the glass.
Is there some reason scanner's use white under the lid?
On Jun 20, 12:14 am, Barry Watzman <WatzmanNOS...@neo.rr.com> wrote:
> That is a function of the software, not thescanner. I use Cardscan
> (Corex), it both saves the image and OCRs the contents. There is really
> no reason not to OCR the contents (the OCR is very good, and very fast
> -- just 2 or 3 seconds, literally). You really do need to OCR if only
> to be able to do searches to find thecard(may not sound like a big
> deal, but mycarddatabase has thousands of cards).
>
> By the way, with Cardscan, you can use any flatbed twainscanner, and
> more to the point, you can lay 8 cards on thescannerand scan them all
> at once (one note, you need a black, not a white background). Cardscan
> will delineate them into separate cards and save them as if they had
> been scanned individually.
>
Do you have a link to a place where I can buy the software? I did a
search on Amazon and everything that came back looked to be older
versions.
I'm using version 6 and have no need to upgrade. Cardscan is published
by Corex. You can buy it direct; the office stores (OfficeMax, Staples,
Office Depot) carry the scanners, but software only is harder (but not
impossible) to find at retail.
Thornhill wrote:
> On Jun 20, 12:14 am, Barry Watzman <WatzmanNOS...@neo.rr.com> wrote:
>> That is a function of the software, not thescanner. I use Cardscan
>> (Corex), it both saves the image and OCRs the contents. There is really
>> no reason not to OCR the contents (the OCR is very good, and very fast
>> -- just 2 or 3 seconds, literally). You really do need to OCR if only
>> to be able to do searches to find thecard(may not sound like a big
>> deal, but mycarddatabase has thousands of cards).
>>
>> By the way, with Cardscan, you can use any flatbed twainscanner, and
>> more to the point, you can lay 8 cards on thescannerand scan them all
>> at once (one note, you need a black, not a white background). Cardscan
>> will delineate them into separate cards and save them as if they had
>> been scanned individually.
>>
>
> Do you have a link to a place where I can buy the software? I did a
> search on Amazon and everything that came back looked to be older
> versions.
>
> Thanks.
>
>