Document conversion I: Adobe quickens Capture

Adobe Systems Inc.'s Acrobat Capture is a program with a very clearly defined mission: scanning hardcopy documents and converting them into searchable Acrobat Portable Document Format files that can be made accessible to users on a localarea network, the Internet or other media.

Adobe Systems Inc.'s Acrobat Capture is a program with a very clearly defined

mission: scanning hard-copy documents and converting them into searchable

Acrobat Portable Document Format files that can be made accessible to users

on a local-area network, the Internet or other media.

Unlike ZyLab International Inc.'s ZyImage, the other program we tested

for this review of scanning/conversion programs (see Page 40), Capture doesn't

allow you to include existing document files in the process, nor does it

offer the breadth of search tools and output choices that ZyImage delivers.

But the functionality that Capture does provide is crafted into an extremely

easy-to-use and highly scalable package. With the just-released Version

3.0 of the program, Adobe has transformed Capture into a tool suitable for

larger enterprises that have heavy loads of documents to move to the World

Wide Web or other electronic media.

In fact, Acrobat Capture is available in two versions. The Personal

Edition has a limit of converting 20,000 pages, after which the right to

convert additional pages can be purchased.

The new Cluster Edition, which we tested, not only comes with no page

limit but also offers load balancing across multiple workstations. The software

also supports dual- and quad-processor systems. Finally, administrators

can dole out various processing jobs to specified workstations. You might,

for example, route all documents to a designated staff person for checking

the character recognition results.

Installing Capture on multiple Windows NT workstations was simple. (The

program is not yet designated as Windows 2000 compliant, although I ran

Capture on a Windows 2000 server and workstation without any problems.)

To get workstations working together on projects, simply click on Station/Join

Workgroup on Capture's main menu, then locate the primary Capture workstation.

Capture's new interface offers a detailed view of all the pieces of a conversion

workflow. The panel on the left has four tabs: Configure, Scan, Submit and

Watch. Clicking on the Configure tab will display all the available workflows.

Creating new workflows, as well as editing existing ones, is easy, thanks

to a generous set of provided templates. You can drag and drop steps from

one workflow to another, and customizing each step is straightforward.

The Scan tab provides access to scanner configuration tools, and you'll

find that Capture supports a wide range of scanners. The Submit tab opens

a dialog box that enables you to specify files for processing. Finally,

the Watch tab allows you to set up folders to be monitored for new files

to be processed. After you've set up directories to be watched, the directories

will be checked periodically. As new files are found, the specified workflow

will be executed automatically.

Once you've set up the workgroup, it's easy to specify what steps in a workflow — from scanning to character recognition to exporting — can be performed

on which workstations.

There are a few things to keep in mind when setting up workgroups. For

starters, if your workgroup contains more than 10 workstations, you will

have to locate the workgroup hub on a file server or a workstation running

Windows NT Server because Windows NT Workstation has a limit of 10 connections.

And if you're running heavy workloads, you'll have to experiment to see

whether it's more effective to move work steps to a separate workstation

or to run them on a multiprocessor system.

Unlike ZyImage, Capture makes it very easy to check on the accuracy of the

program's OCR. This new version of Capture improves on the earlier toolset

with the QuickFix utility, which provides an excellent set of tools for

checking and repairing suspect words. You can make submission of suspect

words to QuickFix part of any workflow, in which case the workflow will

pause at the appropriate stage for an editor to complete the checking procedure.

QuickFix offers an effective interface for document checking. Suspects

are presented in a table, with the first column displaying the image of

the word. The second column shows the suggested spelling. It gives you the

option of accepting the suggestion, deleting the word or editing it.

QuickFix also offers some unexpected flexibility in that it allows you to

sort the suspect entries alphabetically, by their order of appearance, by

degree of confidence or by "reason."

Capture's OCR engine is accurate enough, however, that you'll rarely

need to make corrections. We found that the program did an excellent job

of zoning and recognizing text, even on complex pages loaded with graphics.

If your documents are in good shape, you may never need QuickFix, although

the utility does come in handy if you're importing tattered, faded or otherwise

degraded pages.

Another new feature in Version 3.0 is automatic creation of document links

during recognition. You might, for example, set the program to create a

table of contents, bookmarks, indexes, e-mail addresses or URLs when the

program finds appropriately formatted text.

Capture's main display panel allows administrators to track the status

of documents, view the status of workflow steps on the local workstation

and view the status of all workflows on all stations in the workgroup. The

interface is concise and easy to grasp. The only thing we found ourselves

wishing for was more flexible alert tools. The program provides audio and

visual alerts if a warning is logged or a manual step is awaiting execution.

But these alerts require that Capture be running on your local workstation.

The end result of a Capture workflow is a cross-platform PDF document that

is eminently searchable on a LAN or via the Internet using Adobe Acrobat

4.0. By the way, you also can "push" a copy of the final document to specified

e-mail addresses as part of the workflow.

Acrobat Capture is a powerful, scalable and easy-to-use solution for

turning hard-copy documents into searchable, online documents that faithfully

reproduce the layout and formatting of the original. If you're only going

to be dealing with scanned documents, and if PDF files are suitable as output,

you won't find a more powerful, easier-to-use solution.

MORE INFO

Adobe Acrobat Capture 3.0 Cluster Edition

Score: A

Adobe Systems Inc.

(800) 833-6687

www.adobe.com

Pricing: Standard Edition, $699. Cluster Edition, $7,000 per processor.

Remarks: Acrobat Capture 3.0 is a powerful and easy-to-use solution for movingyour hard-copy documents to searchable databases of electronic documents,and it has the scalability to work well under heavy workloads. The onlycatch is that input is limited to scanned images and output is limited toAcrobat PDF files. If that isn't a problem, you'll find that Capture offersstrong controls over distributing and monitoring workflow and offers excellenttools for performing OCR. It can be used with Windows NT 4.0 with ServicePack 3 or later.

Related Stories

Document conversion II: ZyImage adds choice [Federal Computer Week, April 10, 2000]