Do someone know a good OCR tool I don't have to pay for and that actually recognizes text?
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@antemortem I use #tesseract embedded in #paperlessngx. It has become quite apt. There should be some kind of standalone app.
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@antemortem Normcap dynobo.github.io/normcap/ we ship our TROMjaro Linux with it and I always use it.
RE: tromjaro.com/ -
@antemortem I use #tesseract embedded in #paperlessngx. It has become quite apt. There should be some kind of standalone app.
@nils_ramsperger is it difficult to install/use? I don't have that much informatics skills (I know however how to follow tutorials)
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@nils_ramsperger is it difficult to install/use? I don't have that much informatics skills (I know however how to follow tutorials)
@antemortem since #tesseract itself offers just a command line interface, I guess you will need some kind of desktop or mobile app.
In this case, it depends on what operating system you use. -
@antemortem since #tesseract itself offers just a command line interface, I guess you will need some kind of desktop or mobile app.
In this case, it depends on what operating system you use.@nils_ramsperger I'm using Linux and just read the man page of it. I'll try with command line, then if it fails I'll try another way
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@nils_ramsperger I'm using Linux and just read the man page of it. I'll try with command line, then if it fails I'll try another way
@antemortem trying the CLI is a good start. On Linux there are plenty of options. If you are on a Debian based distro, you could try OCRFeeder via apt. If you are on a Fedora based distro, Rescribe via Flathub might be worth a try.
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@antemortem I have used a frontend to tesseract whose name I can't remember, but I can try looking it up again when I'm in front of the computer