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    Home»News»Incoming tech: OCR text from PDFs on Chrome, Chromebooks
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    Incoming tech: OCR text from PDFs on Chrome, Chromebooks

    Kevin TofelBy Kevin TofelJanuary 20, 2023Updated:January 20, 20231 Comment2 Mins Read
    OCR text from PDFs coming to Chromebooks, ChromeOS and Chrome
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    While you can already digitize physical documents with Chrome and ChromeOS, you can’t natively get at the digital text of such scans. A new feature that will work both in Chrome and on Chromebooks will do just that. Google is adding OCR text from PDFs, whether you save them, receive them in an email, or scan them.

    OCR text from PDFs coming to Chrome and Chromebooks
    A digital PDF on a Chromebook

    I found in-progress code for this feature in the Chromium code logs today. So you can’t yet get use OCR, or optical character regonition, from a PDF scan just yet in the browser or a Chromebook. At least you can’t on the current Stable Channel of ChromeOS, which is at version 109 since last week. I don’t yet see the feature on the Dev Channel either.

    The first change I found is for a new menu option when viewing a PDF, whether it’s scanned or saved:

    Add a toggle button for PDF OCR to the more action menu on PDF Viewer.
    This toggle button is synced with the pref for PDF OCR and sets the
    pref whenever it's toggled on or off.
    

    That code led me to another change describing the user interface for PDF OCR feature although the screenshots and design documents are internal.

    OCR text from PDFs using the ChromeOS scanner on Chromebooks is on the way

    Google has quickly been beefing up digital documentation on Chromebooks of late and this is simply another step in that march forward. Last month, ChromeOS 108 added a feature that consolidates multiple document pages into a single PDF, for example. And work on the new OCR feature began a few short months ago, back in November.

    I also appreciate that OCR text from PDFs is coming not just to Chromebooks but also to any device running the Google Chrome browser.

    Initially, I thought this was a ChromeO-specific feature addition. However, the change log specifically references Linux, Mac and Windows systems as well. Are there good third-party options for scanning digital text from a PDF on those platforms? Sure, there are plenty. Having such a feature baked in is always nice to have, however.

    Chrome browser Chrome OS Chromebooks ChromeOS OCR text from PDFs Scanning documents on Chromebooks
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    Kevin Tofel
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    After spending 15 years in IT at Fortune 100 companies, Kevin turned a hobby into a career and began covering mobile technology in 2003. He writes daily on the industry and has co-hosted the weekly MobileTechRoundup podcast since 2006. His writing has appeared in print (The New York Times, PC Magazine and PC World) and he has been featured on NBC News in Philadelphia.

    1 Comment

    1. CajunMoses on January 20, 2023 8:41 pm

      Technically, anyone with access to Google Drive can already use Google to convert scanned PDF documents into OCR text for free:
      https://nanonets.com/blog/google-drive-ocr-image-to-text-google-docs-ocr/

      But, generally, OCR of scanned PDF documents gets into a territory that requires non-free software. While I can’t wait for this feature to be built into my browser, I can imagine that it will anger some. Namely, software developers who feature OCR in the products that they sell. Google is certainly more than capable of implementing OCR, as anyone who has ever searched Google Books knows. Hopefully the OCR that they implement inside the browser won’t be watered down so much as to be practically worthless.

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