hey,
that is fantastic, love that it makes folders for the diferent formats.
i will be getting this program.
thanks

Michael
On 11 Dec 2013, at 3:02 pm, Bryan Jones <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Michael,
> 
> Thank you for the additional clarification. It looks like ABBYY FineReader 
> Pro for Mac can do what you are asking. Following your outline, I was able to 
> import 5 PDF files at once and have them all OCR’d and saved as individual 
> TXT files in one test scenario and DOCX files in a second scenario. Here are 
> the steps I followed to do this.
> 
> 1. I placed the 5 sample PDF files in their own folder inside the Documents 
> folder on my Mac.
> 
> 2. I launched ABBYY FineReader Pro for Mac.
> 
> 3. I chose File / New. This opens the “New Task” window. In this window there 
> are a couple of unlabeled or mislabeled items, but the important sections are 
> accessible with VO. It takes a few minutes of navigating through the elements 
> on this screen to get them figured out, but essentially there are two working 
> modes to choose from: A “Quick Conversion” mode and a standard mode. I’m not 
> sure of all the differences, but the Quick conversion offers 4 output 
> formats, while the standard mode offers 12 output formats. I tested using the 
> MS Word output format in Quick Conversion and the TXT output format in the 
> standard mode.
> 
> 4. In both cases I was prompted to select the source file(s) using a standard 
> OSX file selection dialog where I selected all 5 of the PDF source files at 
> once and then selected the Export button to start the conversion process.
> 
> 5. The conversion process took a couple of minutes and there was a cryptic 
> status message displayed during this process.
> 
> 6. At the end of the conversion I was presented with a dialog box telling me 
> I would have better luck working with 600 DPI sources. I closed this message 
> and was presented with another dialog box that included a popup with an 
> option to Create a separate file for each source file” and then the process 
> finished.
> 
> I looked in Finder and found that a subfolder for the TXT and one for the 
> DOCX output files had been created inside my test folder and the converted 
> files had been placed inside those folders Each file had the same name as 
> it’s original PDF file but with the TXT or DOCX extension instead.
> That’s the short version of the story, but I hope it helps. There were a 
> number of other options I ignored during the process, and I’m sure someone 
> here or on AppleVis will do a podcast or a more thorough write-up as time 
> permits.
> 
> Cheers,
> Bryan
> 
> On Dec 10, 2013, at 9:01 PM, Michael Marshall <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
>> hey,
>> i do not have a scanner for the computer.
>> in finereader express you can inport more than one pdf document how ever, it 
>> will put all the OCR text into one big document.
>> if i use finreader pro this is what i do:
>> say i have 5 documents with the names doc one to 5.pdf. i inport the 5 files 
>> into finereader pro. finereader will ad and OCR eatch page of the documents. 
>> i then go into file menue and hit save as. finereader will then save a copy 
>> of the 5 documents i inported into the program in another format so, you 
>> have doc 1.html and so on in what ever format you like to use.
>> that is all there is to it. i believe a user on the list ann? sorry if that 
>> spelling is wrong knows more about this stuff than i do.
>> 
>> hope this helped a bit.
>> 
>> Michael
> 
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