Posted on 06/16/2006 1:09:02 PM PDT by Snoopers-868th
Thank you very much. That is exactly what I needed someone to tell me. Instead of Dumbest, I can now be Dumber. LOL
Do I get a bunch of junk from Yahoo with that search tool? Is it on their main page? I never go there. My home page is FR. Thanks
The way I make PDFs from text is searchable, at least on my 'puter. Here's what I did to check, just now. On this very thread, I went up to file, print, and then changed my printer to Adobe PDF, then printed (make sure you indicate where you want it saved because if you don't, like anything, you won't be able to find it). Name it, too, unless you like the name it makes for itself. When you print to the Adobe PDF printer, you're not really printing, you're creating a PDF. Then, if it doesn't open all by itself, which mine did, go to it, open it, and see if you can search it. This is what I did just now with this thread to check it. And it worked perfectly. And it took seconds.
No, at this time you only get junk already on your hard drive! :-)
There are several free search programs, but the one that supports the most file formats (by far) is the Yahoo! Desktop Search.
It is available here:
http://desktop.yahoo.com
That is what I did. Thank for the memories!! So how do I get Adobe as a printer option? Any input? It is not there now.
It probably is overkill for the photographic images, but good for small text. That may explain why your file sizes are so large.
Wikipedia - NyquistShannon sampling theorem
Thanks a million to all of you. HAL your link looked like rocket science to me. ROTFLOL
Thanks for the Yahoo search. It took my CPU usage up to 80%. I wondered what the heck is it doing--well, indexing, naturally. Thanks again.
If you have Adobe Reader (the free version), the writer should install with the reader, at least I'm pretty sure of that. Maybe you could reinstall Adobe Reader from Adobe's website, see if that puts an Adobe PDF Writer in your printer folder. It's free!
Maybe this will help: http://www.geneseo.edu/CMS/display.php?page=2628&dpt=cit
However, I tried to do what they said but it didn't work.
As far as Adobe's website PDF maker, the one you make through their website, they let you make a few for free, and it worked incredibly well, for me. I converted WP5.1 for DOS documents on it and they were beautiful. It's pretty affordable, too. But you should be able to make these PDFs on your computer, I just don't understand why you don't have the writer already there, unless you don't have Adobe Reader installed.
One more thought, and I'll let you be. If worse comes to worse, go to Ebay and for $19.95 you can buy Adobe Acrobat as a download, too. It's really the standard in the industry and everyone should have Reader on their computer so it's probably the best way to go. The only thing I'm not sure of if you do a search from your computer, not from within Acrobat, if it will pick up words in Acrobat documents. If it doesn't it means that if you're doing a search, you have to open up every single Acrobat document, oh, wait, I think you can search all your Acrobat documents from inside Acrobat.
Okay, I'm finished, now that you're probably totally confused.
But, hey, let me know how everything works out! Regards....
I do have the reader 7.0 but the writer I think they sell. I don't know because I really dislike Adobe. It is so slow. I might do a restore point and update Adobe and see if I can find something. Maybe I just have to add it somehow--like a printer, but I don't know and wouldn't know where to go if I get the search for file screen. Can you tell me if the file extension on a PDF file is PDF? I can do a save to a file rather than print but it is a PRN file extension. Don't know what that is. Guess, I will do a google search and see. Thanks for the input and you are not bothering me.
To put it simply, try to scan your document with enough resolution to distinctly separate each letter on the page. Look at the scanned image and make sure a visible gap exists between each letter - except for letters printed with a ligature, i.e., without a gap, which typically occur in combinations like "rt". About 200-to-300 dots per inch (DPI) of resolution is usually sufficient to get accurate OCR output for most documents.
You proved my point exactly. You know rocket science! I learned something new today. Thanks for the pointers they all are helpful. Do you know what Auntie Mame is talking about by having Adobe available on your printer menu? What do I need to do to have that happen, do you know?
If Acrobat Standard or Professional is available for $19.95 as a download, you are very likely getting a pirated version.
It will take a few hours to index your system.
Make sure you have enough RAM memory to do what you are trying to do, as well. Hopefully you have at least 512 MB of RAM, and ideally, more. It is cheap for what it will do, so this might be a good time to buy.
1. Scan the image.
2. OCR the image
3. Allow you to save the text as a PDF
In my testing, I have found that ScanSoft OmniPage has the needed features. Once you scan and OCR, you can save the PDF in a format they call something like "text with overlay".
This places the actual scanned image, directly overlaid on top of the text as it was OCR'ed. Thus, if you full-text index a group of PDFs, or if you open a particular PDF and search for text, you will be given the text, but, it will look like the original document.
Any marks or graphics that are not recognized by the OCR engine, can still be seen, but not searched on (they are saved in the graphics overlay part, which you look at).
I hope I explained this well enough ...
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