Esther,
You said:
It's certainly worth getting as a free app.   
So, are you saying ClearCam is not worth the $1.99, but worth getting when
it shows up for free?

Thanks,
Richard

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Esther
Sent: Saturday, July 14, 2012 12:28 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Perfect OCR (Free for limited time)

Hi Anne,

I'll need to try this again, but my recollection from trying perfect OCR
some months ago is that I got better results using ClearCam to take multiple
pictures and then run Perfect OCR on the image from the camera roll as
opposed to taking three pictures in the Perfect OCR app.  ClearCam is an app
that was made by Occipital -- the people who originally made the Red Laser
barcode app that eBay bought.  Back before we had voice control options, I
found that ClearCam was the easiest way to take a picture for OCR that was
not blurred if you weren't relying on vision, since it would fire off
multiple shots and then save the clearest one to the camera roll, and tell
you which one it was.  (It was almost never the first one in the sequence,
which tells you that there tends to be some camera shake from tapping the
button to expose.)

This could have improved since then, since at that time it tended to be a
memory hog, and it seems better in that regard.  It's certainly worth
getting as a free app.   It's listed as one of the "notable apps" under the
App Advice app guide on "Document Scanners for the iPhone" -- which includes
apps that only produce images and have no OCR capability.  Here's the
excerpted entry:
Source: http://appadvice.com/appguides/show/document-scanners-for-the-iphone
<begin quote>
Perfect OCR: document scanner with high quality OCR by Pixoft Perfect OCR
builds on TurboScan, which is also featured in this AppGuide. The app takes
all of the great features found in that app like SureScan and adds OCR
capabilities. OCR or optical character recognition takes an image and
applies a text layer over the image. The app is hit or miss with OCR
conversions. If you are working with some standard paper print outs the app
performs great. If you try to scan newspapers the app will not perform as
well. The app can be a very useful for turning an image into text.
<end quote>

HTH.  Cheers,

Esther

On Jul 14, 2012, at 8:55 AM, Anne Robertson wrote:

> I got better results using the camera directly and taking just one picture
rather than taking three. I have no sight at all, and I got middling
results. I'll try again when light conditions are better.
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> Anne
> 
> 
> On 14 Jul 2012, at 19:58, jeremy wrote:
> 
>> So far, the application works with semi-ok results. Using the camera was
a bit tricky though. This was made more difficult in my situation do to
having my phone in a case with a camera cover but my resulting OCR was
better than anything else I've seen so far. Wasn't able to use any shortcuts
to click the camera so had to rely on doubletapping the button. The app asks
you to snap three pictures of the document, in this example the instructions
for an itunes giftcard.
>> I really think that if one were to place the phone in a stand of some
sort, this app would really work well with what I've noticed.
> 

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