Hi sandy, 

First of all, I have always valued your posts in regards to OCR scanning with 
the phone. It's interesting that I usually get the best scan results with "Say 
Text." May be this solution will allow me to revisit "Prizmo." I have a couple 
or few questions. 

1. Who is the developer or vendor that will be producing this device?
2. The phone case that I have has a nice rectangular cut out for the camera. 
Will this be sufficient to line the camera up with the hole, or will I need to 
remove it and place the tactile place markers for alignment? 
3. Do you know when this will be available for the consumer to purchase? 

I know this is a lot of questions, but I am excited if there can be a better 
method in capturing printed materials when I am out-and-about. Thanks for all 
of your hard work in the area of making the OCR more accessible for the 
visually impaired. 

Best, 
Eileen 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Sandratomkins
Sent: Sunday, January 27, 2013 6:05 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: ScanBox.

OK, for those of you interested in a more user friendly interface when using 
the OCR Apps available to us, may I introduce the ScanBox!

    1. What is it? ScanBox is, as you might guess, a box designed to enable 
scanning. It is a box which collapses flat, to the size of a sheet of 
foolscap/A4 size (the tuypical size of a printed letter) It is the work of 
seconds to assemble it and it weighs a couple of ounces. It costs somewhere in 
the region of 25 Euros/Dollars (a very loose conversion there!) It comes 
equipped with a LED light, but you have to connect a battery to this.
Once assembled, the foot print is A4 sized and the height is about 16 inches. I 
have only had a chance to play with a prototype which is made of cardboard, but 
understand that the finished product is plastic. 

2. What does ScanBox do for us? On the top of the box there is a hole, over 
which you must position the camera of the phone. With the help of my partner, I 
have placed four tactile markers corresponding with the corners of the iPhone 
when in the exact position. The box is open on one side, so it is simplicity 
itself to slide a sheet of text into the box. In this way, the phone is 
perfectly placed for the shot, the paper is perfectly aligned and the distance 
is perfect for prizmo to do its stuff! I mention Prizmo because I have only 
tried SayText and Prizmo with this box and have to report that Saytext will not 
work with it for reasons I could explain, but will leave for now in the 
interest of brevity. Probably other OCR packages will work with the ScanBox, 
but Prizmo has its advantages for us, so I will stick with it for now.

    As you can imagine, 2 of the variables which make the use of the camera 
difficult for us VIPs have been dealt with, I.E. the perfect positioning of the 
phone in relation to the text, involving no skill at all, especially, once 
these corner markers have been attached. So, totally hands-free I can tell 
Prizmo to "take picture" and it is done! The only other variable which causes 
difficulty for us is good lighting. Because the ScanBox comes with a LED light 
set into the top, there should be no problem re ambient lighting, shadows etc. 
However, with this prototype version, I have to admit that the light is 
woefully inadequate and I have stuck, onto the underside of the lid of the box, 
2 LED lights of my own. I should say that a friend of mine in Australia (the 
home of the ScanBox) has the final version and reports that the lights that 
come with the box work well for her. So, fingers crossed on that one! 

    In the past, on this list, I have described my own experimentation using a 
cardboard box with a hole cut into the top and have reported reasonable results 
with same, but who wants to live with a big, ugly, box in their lovely home 
environment? Plus, who wants to carry something like that in the off chance 
that they might need to OCR a restaurant menu? So, ScanBox does the same thing 
while being very portable, foldable and light! It costs more than your 
cardboard box and when you first see it, you do think "Hmmm, seems like a lot 
for a flat-pack box" but if it does the business well...

    I have found it to be excellent using prizmo on single sheets of text, but 
below please find an example taken from the Encyclopaedia Britannica (a huge, 
hard-back book, which is very difficult to flatten!) The page in question 
contains 2 columns of text, no pictures, I think, and it does go a little awry 
toward the very bottom, but I didn't hold the page flat, merely holding the 
other side of the book virtically to allow the page I was scanning to lay as 
flat as possible. The iPhone 4s was sitting happily by itself on the top of the 
box comfortably between the four corner markers, my LED ;ogjts were on and I 
only had to say "Take Picture!"

    So, here is is! Sorry if it is a bit long, but I wanted to demonstrate a 
scan which would have taxed me, using my Prizmo skills and which I could not 
have achieved without using this ScanBox because scanning from the 
Encyclopaedia Britannica ahs always been my yardstick when practising with the 
various OCR Apps.

    Finally, I must say that not everyone who has tried this box has been 
immediately enchanted, but as I now have it set up, I can only say that because 
I use it totally hands-free and I apply no skill of judgement at all, it must 
be possible for all of us to work it to an acceptable degree of success.

    Here's the scan, Enjoy,
   Sandy. 

kitchen of a lonely farmhouse; as the doomed man's head is held in an oven, and 
his hands (the only thing in the picture) convulsively twitch, the sound of 
hissing gas dominates the scene. The introduction of sound also made it 
possible to use silence with a dramatic effect that is more telling than either 
words or music.
Like images, sounds can be used to represent subjective thoughts, indicating 
not what the character is saying but what is in his mind. For example, in 
Hitchcock's Blackmail (1929), the first English sound film, the words "knife, 
knife, knife" are repeated in the thoughts of a frightened gift who thinks that 
she has committed a murder.
In terms of montage, sound, dialogue, and music are used in combination not 
only with one another but also with the visual image. They can overlap and vary 
in intensity in a flexible and €omplex pattern. The finished sound track may 
involve mixing together tracks of dialogue, background noises, and music 
recorded at different times; the tracks must be matched to one another and to 
the visual film. Though the audience may hear it simply as an accompaniment to 
what they see, the sound may be the most expensive and difficult part of a 
motion picture.
Music. The live music that accompanied silent films varied from a full 
orchestra to a honky-tonk piano, according to the size of the cinema. Music was 
effectively used on the film set to improve an actor's performance.
With sound, music became an integral part of the picture on the screen. Early 
mood music was so expressive that often it now seems overblown. Conscientious 
filmmakcrs soon learned the virtue of restraint, using music less frequently 
but with more effect. Since the 1960s, electronic music, as in Close Encounters 
of the Third Kind (1977), has come to be commonly used.
Music often has an important function in emotional climaxes of motion pictures. 
It can be used effectively to relieve or sublimate intolerable intensity--of 
grief, pain, or ecstasy. The Gospel According to St. Matthew (1964) by the 
Italian director Pier Paolo Pasolini reveals how expressive periods of silence 
can be, and how great music can ennoble scenes like those of Christ's 
persecution and agony on the cross. Music may also be used symbolically.
In Lton Morin, pr~tre (Leon Morin, Priest, 1961), for example, a sequence of 
harsh chords represents the German occupation forces, and a dancing bugle motif 
represents the Italian troops. Organ music is used in scenes showing the 
heroine with the priest in church, and piano music when they are in his flat. 
Hurdy-gurdy music represents two gossiping spinsters, and in a climactic scene 
louder and louder electronic music represents the heroine's obsessive sexual 
feeling for the priest, until she reaches out to take his hand.
Sound engineering. It is the function of the sound engineer to select and 
modify sound as the cameraman selects visual images. Since the noise of 
crockery, cutlery, or paper or the chirping of crickets would be intolerable 
transferred in full volume to the screen, the sound engineer must tone them 
down. Treble and bass must be balanced. In other cases, in order to get the 
effect needed, sound has to be built up and orchestrated as if it were music. 
Again, sound need not correspond exactly with the visual images. Artistic use 
can be made of asynchronism; that is, contrasting the sound to the visual 
image. Motionpicture sound is capable of remarkable delicacy, richness, and 
variety. Sound libraries put most conceivable sounds readily at the disposal of 
filmmakers. Instruments and voices can be modified, overlapped, echoed, or 
given a resonance and volume that transform them. Dialogue can be crystal 
clear, bringing the audience far closer to an actor than in the theatre, or it 
may deliberately reproduce the careless enunciation of everyday speech.
The script. Although conventions vary from one coun.
try to another, the script usually develops over a number of distinct stages, 
from a synopsis of the original idea, through a "treatment" that contains an 
outline and considerably more detail, to a shooting script. Although the terms 
are used ambiguously, script, or screenplay, usually refers to the dialogue and 
the annotations necessary to understand the action; a script reads much like 
other printed forms of more OIt~ll z,t~ .... .
extensive technical details regarding the setnng, me camera work, and other 
factors. Moreover, a shooting script may have the scenes arranged in the order 
in which they will be shot, a radically different arrangement from that of the 
film itself since, for economy, ,all of the scenes involving the same actors 
and sets are ordinarily shot at the same time. Some scripts are subsequently 
modified into novels and distributed in book form, such as the U.S. best-seller 
Love Story (1970) by Erich Segal, and, in the instance of Dylan Thomas' The 
Doctor and the Devils (1953), a script became a literary work without ever 
having been made into a motion picture. Generally, more elaborate productions 
require more elaborate shooting scripts, while more personal films may be made 
without any form of written script. The script's importance can vary greatly, 
however, depending on the director. Griflith and other early directors, for 
example, often worked virtually without a script, while directors such as 
Hitchcock planned the script thoroughly and designed pictorial outlines, or 
storyboards, depicting specific scenes or shots before shooting any film.
Adaptation from other art forms must take into account Fi differences of 
complexity and scale in film. A film often must omit characters and incidents 
in the novel from of which it is adapted, for example, and the pace usually w 
must be accelerated. Ordinarily, only a fraction of a novel's dialogue can be 
included. In an adaptation of a play, the curtailment is less severe, but much 
dialogue still must be cut or expressed visually.
Well over half of all fiction films made since 1920 have been adapted from 
plays or novels, and it is understandable that certain formulas have been 
tacitly accepted to facilitate the remaking of literature into moving pictures.
Adaptation has been thought of as an aesthetically inferior exercise, because 
most such films merely illustrate the classics or reshape a literary text until 
it conforms to stanchard cinematic practice. The particular qualities that made 
the original interesting are often lost in such a process.
Certain films and filmmakers, however, have achieved an aesthetic premium by 
accepting the literariness of the original and then confronting this with the 
technology and methods of the cinema. Since the 1970s numerous directors have 
explored literature in an almost documentary manner. The artifice of the French 
director Eric Rohmer's Die Marquise yon O. (1976), for example, aptly expresses 
the literary sensibility of Heinrich yon Kleist's romantic, ironic work. On the 
other hand, less adventurous, big.
budget adaptations continue to reshape the literary works they are based on 
into conventional "Hollywood" movies, as some critics complained about Sidney 
Pollack's Out of Africa (1985). The delicate and changing sensibility of the 
main character, evident in the prose of the original, was not reflected in the 
film's traditional, albeit grand, presentation.
Although many eminent literary authors, including F.
Scott Fitzgerald and William Faulkner, have worked on film scripts, the ability 
to write a good original script, especially under strict studio conditions, 
frequently belongs to lesser-known scenarists with a strong visual sense. Some 
writers, particularly in France, have tried to narrow the gap between the 
written and cinematic modes of expression.
Marguerite Duras and Aiain Robbe-Grillet became leaders of a new kind of author 
who is able and willing to "write" directly on film. Both have directed their 
own films, which they see as equivalent to their novels and plays.
M°tion'l~icture acting, Of all the artists involved in films, the actors and 
actresses are closest to the audience.
The public more often goes to see a motion picture for its stars than for any 
Other single reason. The divergent techniques of stage and film "
tl~ed there are man,. ! ....
acting are well understood, cauing prayers who excel in both. Bat greatest film 
stars have a talent Peculiar to the screen alone. This talent often seems to be 
related not to how well they act, but to the so
Film actim, r,,-,,;---    rt of Person they appear to be.
the advice ,~,~..~,,-es restraint "Don't at1 -tl~ink" was I]eingf ~-rue 
emin~,,. ,--    "    . .............. one,At ~,,, merman director F.W. Murnau.
dramatic literature, while "shooting script" or "scenario" .While stage actors 
may be praised for a performance that ~ahmghllYerr°~ugh', film stars usualN m,~ 
be • . ~-lose-u,.- a .........
t appear to • "~ ~:centuate the more intimate rel

Sent from my iPhone

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