Enter your company name and tagline/slogan so that our logo design tool can create logo designs for you. You can also select your business industry to see designs related to your business. Browse our logo gallery and select the logo design of your choice. You can modify color, font, style and size as well.
Here’s the scenario; you have a hard copy of a typed document you want to edit but there is no digital or editable copy available. Your scanning does not include OCR and only saves scanned documents in non-editable image format. Your only courses of action appear to be a) download and install OCR software or b) completely retype the document from scratch.Enter; a free online service specifically designed for converting images to editable formats:Free Online OCRUse Optical Character Recognition software without installation on your computer. Recognize text and characters from scanned documents (including multipage files), photographs and digital camera captured images. Free Online OCR service supports 32 recognition languages.Convert scanned PDF to Word, Txt, RtfExtract text from image (JPG, JPEG, BMP, TIFF, GIF) and convert into editable Word, Text, Excel, PDF, Html output formats. Converted documents look exactly like the original – tables, columns and graphics.OnlineOCR.net is a free service in a “Guest mode” (without registration) that allows you to convert 15 images per hour.As the ‘blurb’ on the home page explains; the free service, in ‘Guest Mode’, does not require registration, but upload file size is limited to 4.0MB a pretty reasonable maximum considering text image file sizes would generally be quite small.So how does it work?
It’s a very simple process. Scan your document hard copy and save to a suitable folder on the hard drive as PDF.
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Back:. Next:About the AuthorJim is the resident freeware aficionado at DCT. A computer veteran with 30+ years experience who first started writing about computers and tech back in the days when freeware was actually free. His first computer was a TRS-80 in the 1980s, he progressed through the Commodore series of computers before moving to PCs in the 1990s. Now retired (aka an old geezer), Jim retains his passion for all things tech and still enjoys building and repairing computers for a select clientele. As well as writing for DCT, of course.