Showing posts with label Edition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edition. Show all posts

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Review: Abbyy FineReader 11 Professional Edition does clean OCR and is easy to use

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AppId is over the quota

Anyone who's purchased a multifunction printer or scanner recently will probably recognize the name FineReader, as the Sprint version ships with many such products. Obviously, there are deals being made, but there's no questioning that the program also does a very nice job of OCR. Text extraction is great, though it's not quite as good at recreating complex documents in Word and RTF files as Acrobat or OmniPage.

Abbyy FineReader 11 Professional ($170, 15-day free trial) is straightforward and easy to use. The main window shows a list of images in a column to the far left, the image being processed in a pane next to it, and the OCR'd text and elements in a pane on the right side. This side-by-side arrangement, shared with OmniPage Standard 18, makes it super-easy to spot mistakes and compare page elements.

Abbyy FineReader 11 Professional's easy-to-understand interface makes it easy to use even if you're new to OCR.

Abbyy FineReader 11 is fast, recognizes text in 189 languages, and outputs in a number of different formats including editable PDFs, Microsoft Word, ePub and even open-source PDF competitor DjVu.

FineReader created a searchable PDF of my yearbook scans just fine, but like OmniPage, it was over-zealous at rotating images trying to find text until I turned off this feature. With most OCR programs, you're better off using Windows' own Photo Viewer to rotate scans to their correct orientation before OCR'ing.

Jon L. Jacobi has worked with computers since you flipped switches and punched cards to program them. He studied music at Juilliard, and now he power-mods his car for kicks.
More by Jon L. Jacobi


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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Review: Baldurs Gate Enhanced Edition dient, die klassischen RPG besser und schlechter, als Sie merken

BioWare has it great riding on the back of the Baldur's Gate and its success was the basis for Add-ons, sequels and spin offs, which established Ray Muzyka and Greg Zeschuk as legends in the gaming industry. A mixture of undiluted 2nd Edition D & D rules along with party combat dynamics, well matched and a strong, character-driven narrative produced his remains one an experience, so satisfied, benchmark, which the other RPGs are measured. Overhaul games, fresh from the smooth remake of MDK2 HD to the visor considerably higher in the rear organic goods catalog and produced a long requested and eagerly awaited this crown jewel of the gaming update. Baldur's Gate enhanced Edition ($20, only buy) new story leads official native high-definition graphics content, multiplayer support, and a Gladiator-style combat mode for quick action. It delivers this promise, but like most translations, has lost some of the original sparks in the process.

(1) Character creation is a step down memory lane with D & D 2nd Edition rules that used throughout.

Overhaul games, who given started life distributor Beamdog, reserve soldiers BioWare for over a year before accessing the Holy infinity engine source code as a division of the online game drained the lifeblood from the Baldur's Gate, Icewind Dale, Planescape. What followed were hundreds error fixes and improvements as the engine for modern OS and hardware environments along with Visual upgrades on the artwork and interface graphics has been rebuilt.

The technical improvements are largely successful. The game runs in sharp high resolution without delay and supports widescreen monitors feats, which can perform the original game only with significant end user changes natively. Engine improvements from later games in the series, such as shadows of AMN, retroactively fitted so that additional class kits and Subraces are available to round out the character creation. Have been raised the experience GAP, also give a bit of leeway for point driving Multiclass builds.

Combat is a mixture of RTS-mob-management and RPG Clickfest.

Gameplay is largely the same, with characters that left the right side of the screen, mode selection and actions at the bottom. Control is more like a RTS game than a traditional action RPG, focus mob attacks with a stop-go command-flow arrangement powers for your party or relying on AI. Quick slots to pick the preferred weapons or using function keys, and despite his age, the ergonomics of the layouts are easy to appreciate. In some respects they surpass the radial menu paradigm BioWare used for the subsequent Neverwinter Nights series.

Stylistic changes are less on goal, however. The newly designed 2D overlay cinematics are derived of course vastly improved content creation software, but they do not more effective than the sparse original each. The rudimentary 3D animation, which seems more authentic featured the version of 1998 and more closely, the rest of the art style of the game also fits modern eyes.

(3) Baldur's gate can be lying around much back story. Ready to read.

Content updates are hit and Miss. New material is welcome, such as the Gladiator mode, which allows you to access level, try out various combat strategies and master infinity engine combat outside land generally have hits. New page-quests are, but less polished a candle up to the original action not with dialogue and creative aspects.

Nevertheless, the game remains highly entertaining and a nice package for the $20 price issues. More updates planned series in the works and a possible plan to create, the people at overhaul Baldur's Gate III is based remakes from the rest of the infinity engine deserve a little love and attention. If annoys you mushrooms for the PC version, because the original, complete with mods, your hard drive is, consider the iOS or Android version coming.

Note: The download button on the product information page, reach the website of the manufacturer, where you can download the latest version of the software.


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Monday, February 18, 2013

Join us on Monday's Premium Edition Webinar: favorite new features in Office 365 on-site at MVP Conference

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You can visit us Monday for a special webinar on the MVP Conference in Redmond, where we spotlight customer of favorite new features in Office 365 Home Premium and a live Q & A with Office 365 and we create to engage webinars on Office.com. We start this Office MVP-15-minute Webinar to follow Pacific time, with a Q & A 16:30. Click on the link below to join.

https://join.Microsoft.com/meet/dougt/F274WBQZ

There are two ways, you can join: you use the free download of the Lync participants to full video and sound, or use your Web browser and call audio get: Pamet.MP3 320. 3585, Conference ID: 84172528.

Go to http://aka.ms/offweb more information, how to join the series. A video of the webinar will be posted shortly after the webinar. We organise regular Webinar Tuesday spot on the MVP Conference with tips from MVPs.

What do you learn at Monday's Webinar:

New features in Office customers tell us their tips for Timeto365.com a bit Office 15-minute Webinar series A peak at Office 365 small business (coming February 27)

References for this Webinar:

--Doug Thomas


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Monday, March 12, 2012

ADPS Single Edition発表

ADPS Single Edition?? « ??????? function clearSearch() {document.search_form.s.value = "";} .recentcomments a{display:inline !important;padding:0 !important;margin:0 !important;}adobe.com      ??????? / ADPS Single Edition??by Takashi Iwamoto  

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Saturday, April 16, 2011

Professional Edition – New Lower Platform Fee

Professional Edition – New Lower Platform Fee « Adobe Digital Publishing function clearSearch() {document.search_form.s.value = "";} adobe.com      Adobe Digital Publishing / Professional Edition – New Lower Platform Feeby Dave Dickson  

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