Scan a Book in Five Minutes

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Oh man this will be the first project I ever back. Hope I don't regret it.


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Looks great, Patrick! I have a very slow scanner, which makes scanning tedious. Do let us know how it works, please.
 
Nice! I like how it takes out the distortion in the center of the book. Also I wonder if it filters out the fingers holding the pages.
 
I am betting this will be a game changer for home users who want to convert books, especially the old ones no longer in print, to digital libraries:

http://www.teleread.com/publishing/...art-scanner-with-foot-pedal-and-wifi-support/

I will let you know how it works when I get mine in January. ;)

That looks clever.

I scanned my three volumes of Turretin's Institutes (for my personal use only!) using a Pentax K 50 on a tripod and a piece of glass over the pages. It took longer than 15 minutes for three volumes, though.

As I got into the rhythm, I reached around 24 pages a minute, or around a half hour per volume.

But then I had to combine the images using Adobe Acrobat Pro, crop, correct, and OCR them. In the end I think it took more than an hour per volume of fiddling, plus the time it took to OCR the whole thing and then process the pdf to a manageable size.

The easiest time I've had scanning books is to take a table saw to the spine and then run the pages through an autofeed double-sided scanner! [No worries, Chris: they were old law form books and construction reference manuals, not classics.]
 
I know what you mean, Victor. A few months ago I dismantled an oversized book into individual pages for scanning/OCR related to my consulting work. It took me over 8 hours on a single page flatbed scanner with no sheet feeder to complete the process. But worth the time and effort as I now have instant search access to its contents and amaze clients with my efficiency.
 
too bad; I have like a ton of large albums that need to be archived for family history preservation. I imagine large devices are significantly more expensive.
 
too bad; I have like a ton of large albums that need to be archived for family history preservation. I imagine large devices are significantly more expensive.
Seems to me one could rig up their own poor-man's version of the product. A high-resolution camera pointing downward and its wide angle lens used to photograph these album pages. Then import the pictures taken and then use ABBYFineReader to convert.
 
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