I have tested cuneiform and here are my findings. It is very fast compared to ocropus. It has a slightly funny way of building, but it built quite easaly under Ubuntu. Although it is suppose to be able to use any imagemagick supported image file when compiled with the imagemagick dev files installed, it segfaults on images with an 8 bit format. I got around that by changing the bit depth using pngcp in my case. I did a few tests and got some very good and some very bad results compared to ocropus. Once the bit depth problem was sorted out, I used the test image files from ocropus alice_1 to alice_9.png and it ocred them without any errors. As said before, cuneiform is fast. I will do more testing and then might modify my ocr front-end software which is released as part of kies, to include this engine as an alternative to ocropus. Kind regards, Willem On Thu, 2 Apr 2009, Jason White wrote: > Chris Brannon <cmbrannon at cox.net> wrote: > > >Has anyone used it? Will it run from the command line? > > I went as far as downloading the source archive. If you can compile it, it > will indeed run from the command line. If you have ImageMagick++ installed, it > will convert the image files from any of the formats supported by ImageMagick, > according to the README documentation. > > I don't currently have a scanner, hence I lack a source of image files to > convert. For this reason, and due also to my other commitments, I didn't try > to compile Cuneiform. > > Sloccount reports over 300,000 lines of C/C++ code. From a quick browse, the > comments in the source code are in Russian, reflecting the origins of the > software. > > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup > -- This message is subject to the CSIR's copyright terms and conditions, e-mail legal notice, and implemented Open Document Format (ODF) standard. The full disclaimer details can be found at http://www.csir.co.za/disclaimer.html. This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. MailScanner thanks Transtec Computers for their support.