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Abbyy FineReader 6.0 Professional (Corp. Ed) (discontinued)

Abbyy FineReader 6.0 Professional (Corp. Ed)

Entered CNET Catalog: 07/19/2002

SKU: FRCFBW60

Manufacturer: Global Marketing Partners

CNET editors' review

  • Editors' Choice: No
  • Reviewed on: 07/29/2002
Optical character recognition, or OCR, software can sweep the text right off your paper documents and into your computer. By converting paper documents and image files into fully editable text documents, OCR saves you invaluable time. For example, you could scan a magazine page instead of having to manually type and reformat it. Abbyy FineReader 6.0 Professional has OCR down pat and performs extra formatting magic too, such as extracting text from Adobe Acrobat PDF files and exporting scanned documents in PDF or HTML format. FineReader is a bit too expensive for most consumers and contains far more features than most of us need, but it has the right tools for the business set. Optical character recognition, or OCR, software can sweep the text right off your paper documents and into your computer. By converting paper documents and image files into fully editable text documents, OCR saves you invaluable time. For example, you could scan a magazine page instead of having to manually type and reformat it. Abbyy FineReader 6.0 Professional has OCR down pat and performs extra formatting magic too, such as extracting text from Adobe Acrobat PDF files and exporting scanned documents in PDF or HTML format. FineReader is a bit too expensive for most consumers and contains far more features than most of us need, but it has the right tools for the business set.

Worth the irritating install
FineReader 6.0 prompts you to register online with Abbyy during installation. If you're running certain programs on your system, such as Roxio's Easy CD Creator, you'll have to register FineReader online or by phone in order to get it to work. Since software registration rarely benefits the user as much as it does the publisher's marketing department, you may find this detail annoying. On the bright side, registration gives you a code to unlock the demo version of FormFiller, a program that comes free with FineReader and lets you design and fill out your own forms onscreen. We guess that this will coax folks who work with lots of forms to register.

The paper eater
This program's main work screen makes scanning easy. It features four panes and a toolbar full of large buttons that provide quick access to fundamental functions, such as scan, read, and spell-check. The left-hand column displays thumbnails of all the pages you've scanned in the current session. In the center is a split view that contains a graphical image of the current scanned page and FineReader's textual interpretation of the page. Finally, a footer window contains an enlarged view of the scanned image across the bottom.

Easy driver
The program works with almost any TWAIN scanner or device, such as a digital camera, and lets you view and manage the scan process within either the device's driver or FineReader's own interface. This flexibility offers some benefits; you may find instances where one will work better for the task at hand than the other. For example, in our tests using an HP OfficeJet G85, a multifunction device that includes a flatbed scanner, the HP driver interface yielded more accurate results, and its default settings worked better with some pages. On the other hand, the FineReader option lets you scan multiple pages simultaneously, using the OfficeJet's automatic document feeder feature.

FineReader reads Adobe Acrobat PDF files from your hard drive and converts them into editable documents with reasonable accuracy. And the spelling checker not only finds misspelled words, it also checks for any questionable results. On one test page, for example, it often mistook the for die but asked for verification because it was uncertain of the accuracy. When checking spelling, FineReader displays a zoomed image of the original document so that you can quickly correct these types of errors.

The proof's on the page
In our tests, FineReader accurately maintained the fonts, formatting, and layouts of most original scanned pages. It also managed to convert a table of text and numbers from a PDF file into a Microsoft Word table with only a few inaccurate font attributes or misread characters. Reversed text, text over colored backgrounds, and text over images, such as on a magazine page, posed few problems for FineReader. However, when we saved a properly scanned document as a PDF, the resulting file contained some inaccurate formatting and layout results. For example, FineReader interpreted a few lines of text in the middle of a column as graphics instead of text because the program was not confident that it had identified some letters correctly. Thankfully, turning off the "Replace uncertain words with images" setting when saving PDF files eliminated this problem.

Skimpy support; slim price
Unfortunately, FineReader's documentation introduces its own flaws. The included instructions are sparse, and the manual contains no index. FormFiller comes with no printed documentation at all, leaving you to roam adequate but superficial digital help files that it installs onto your hard drive. Abbyy offers little documentation for FineReader, just the printed manual, help files, and a tutorial on your hard drive. Nor is there a toll-free number for technical support, though the help you get--free via a toll call, Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. PT, except holidays--is polite, accurate, and to the point.

Considering that you often get decent OCR software free with a new scanner, FineReader's $299 standard price tag is a bit steep. Fortunately, the program costs a far more reasonable $149 if you own any OCR package, including those you get with scanners.

Right for the job
FineReader 6.0 Professional thoroughly accomplishes its primary task: helping you convert paper documents into files you can edit on your computer. It deftly retains formatting and layout details and, for the most part, accurately translates text and makes it easy to correct errors. It is a clear cut above the stripped-down OCR utilities bundled with most scanners, and is on a par with its main competitor, ScanSoft's OmniPage 11.0. FineReader even outperforms OmniPage in some areas, including wrapping text around graphics that are embedded in a column. If you must input large documents or books into your computer, this versatile tool will save you hours or days of work.

FineReader 6.0 Professional's interface lets you choose among processing tasks. The spell-check window, for instance, displays the original image so that you can correct any of the program's reading errors.

User opinions

Select a User Opinion to view: 1 2 3 4

User Rating: 9/10

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User Rating: 9/10

Changed My Life

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Review: ABBYY FineReader Professional 6.0 exemplifies the fantastic execution of a great idea. I rarely post reviews, but am so impressed with this program that I feel obliged to sing its praises. I have tried to explain why I love it. I am a student, so I use it primarily to copy my books and articles onto my computer. Overall, the program runs extremely smoothly and boasts all of the features you would hope for: great quality recognition, spell check, and the option to save files in any number of formats. I generally save files as PDFs and read/mark them up in Acrobat. (This works well for a student because I can write limitless marginalia, search the text for key passages, and underline, highlight, and circle without marking my actual books.) One of ABBYY's nicest features is the option to 'Split Dual Pages', which was specifically designed for books. This allows you to display only the page you are reading and stop your highlighting in Acrobat from continuing across pages. I prefer to save the text with images in front of uncertain characters. I have no problem reading or underlining those words with text and pictures mixed. A three hundred page book is generally not bigger than seven or eight megabytes. Problems with retaining formatting, tables, and indentation are rare, but you do have the option to save the text of a file behind the page image (also in PDF format). This means you can look at an actual photograph of the page - thus guaranteeing the accuracy of the layout - while still underlining, highlighting, and searching the text. The files are a bit bigger and move a bit slower in Acrobat ? the same book would be about 55 megabytes ? but they are still very manageable. I prefer the former format but did use the latter initially. I have been using ABBYY since the start of the academic year, and it has changed my life. I never have a problem finding that passage I remember reading but didn?t jot down. I save myself hours of retyping quotes into my notes. I previously used sticky notes to mark important passages or the architecture of a book, but now I can do that all with (searchable!!) bookmarks and comments in Acrobat. Perhaps most importantly, this makes my library portable. This has proven particularly useful for a publication I am drafting. For the first time, I have been able to take all of my secondary sources into the archives. When I want to know the specific pieces of evidence another scholar has cited, I simply open the material on my computer. If I find a interesting document and want to see if others have commented on it, I can open the material and search it for the citation. None of this would be possible if I didn?t have ABBYY to scan my sources, reliably recognize the text, and save it in the very convenient PDF format. Scanning time is much less than I would have expected. Using an inexpensive Lexmark X83 flatbed scanner, I can scan and recognize just over one page (two pages of a book) per minute. ABBYY can receive the images from the scanner and have them recognized in the time it takes for Adobe just to load the image. If I had a document feeder, I expect I could drop a stack of papers in and let them work in the background. Reading material on a computer is probably easier than reading it in a book. I can type comments faster and more legibly than I can scribble them while holding a book open. The text is larger, which makes it easier on my eyes, and I get fewer stiff necks from being hunched over. I have been using ABBYY for about seven months, and I am still discovering great new features. I have listed some of the most recent and pleasantly surprising options: - Scanned images are saved as TIFF files in special folders ABBYY calls ?batches?; using WinZip, it is possible to reduce these batches to ONE TENTH of their original size. - ABBYY displays the recognition percentage for each page allowing you to only spell check those pages with higher error percentages (a high error percentage for ABBYY is 6-7%) - It is possible to run a ?Background Recognition?, so you can continue scanning and editing pages non-stop. This is very convenient. - ABBYY boasts a host of recognition languages including Latin. It also allows you to create a ?user-defined language group? consisting of several languages. (For example, I have created one to recognize English, Latin, and Greek to increase the accuracy for my history books.) Using this feature can take a page mixed with several languages and decrease the error percentage from 5% to 3 or 4%. I love this program and expect it would be useful to many people with diverse needs. There is very little I would change to improve it.

User Rating: 9/10

VERY IMPRESSIVE

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Review: The best OCR i have tried, saves lots of time retyping and the recognition is perfect

User Rating: 8/10

Saved me 3 weekends for 6 months in total

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Review: I counted the time I would spend, retyping texts for my diploma. It's brilliant! so easy, intuitive and accurate!

Tips on Abbyy FineReader 6.0 Professional (Corp. Ed)

Keywords

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Abbyy FineReader 6.0 Professional (Corp. Ed) specifications

  • General
  • Subcategory Utilities - OCR software
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