Harlequin Computer
Solutions, the UK-based makers of
VelOCRaptor, may not want you
to think of their software as lethal, but small,
fast and intelligent it certainly is. For
reasons I can’t explain, there’s
been a dearth of compelling OCR software on the
Mac since OS X came out, so this is a most
welcome development.
Operation is as simple and
as effective as one expects of good Mac
software: take any image file of a scanned page
of text, and drop it on the small VelOCRaptor
window. It immediately starts to process it, and
after several seconds (or up to a minute for
larger, more complex documents), it suddenly
becomes a second version of the file, with the
same filename followed by the words
(with text), which looks the
same, but where you notice you can now select
the text, copy and paste it elsewhere, etc.
I tried it first with a double-sided leaflet, with
images and two columns. The initial,
“dumb” PDF measured 660KB – the
scanned version weighed in at 5.2Mb, but preserved
the images and the column structure.
A copy-and-paste of the scanned text into
TextEdit revealed an imperfect but usable
rendition of the text:
Much better – nearly perfect – fidelity
came about when scanning a plain page of text:
At $29 US, is it worth the money for a licence?
It’s your call, of course, but we’re on
board.
Company: Harlequin
Computer Solutions Ltd | Cost: US$29.00 | Requires:
Mac OS X 10.5 | For further info...