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Do you have a need for OCR? (Optical Charactor Recognition)
Written by Chris Muncy   
Thursday, 28 January 2010 09:25

Every once in a while I come across a printed document that I would really like to scan into my computer for further use, saving, or editing. Well if you have Microsoft Office and the included Microsoft Office Document Imaging Tool you already have this capability.

MODI has built-in functionality to take a tif image, perform OCR on it, then output the results in to Microsoft Word for further editing.

Here are the steps to OCR a tif image:

  1. Take a document, business receipt, packing list, fast food menu, or anything else that has type on it and scan it using your favorite scanning device. As a side note, a lot of graphics programs can take other file formats and convert them to tif images.
  2. Save this scan in a known location as a tif file type.
  3. Go to Programs -> Microsoft Office -> Microsoft Office Tools -> Microsoft Office Imaging Tool and open it up.
  4. Once MODI is open, go to File -> Open -> and browse to the location where you saved your tif image.
  5. Now that your tif image is open, go back up to Tools -> and select Recognize Text using OCR.
  6. An option box will pop up asking you, if you have a multi page tif document, to scan just one page or the entire document.
  7. Once that is complete, go back up to Tools and select Send Text to Word. This will open up Microsoft Word with a new document wit hthe recently OCR scanned results of your tif image.
  8. From here you can save the text and/or do any editing that you see fit.  One word of warning: Since OCR is only looking at text, it will loose essentially all formatting. So tabs and columns will not appear on the result as they were in the original scanned tif image.
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Last Updated on Thursday, 28 January 2010 09:35
 
Setting up Google Search Alerts
Written by Chris Muncy   
Monday, 25 January 2010 10:35

(note - you will need a Google account or GMail account to use this feature)

Google Alerts are email updates of the latest relevant Google results (web, news, etc.) based on your choice of query or topic.

http://www.google.com/alerts.

It offers a lot of nifty uses:

* monitoring a developing news story
* keeping current on a competitor or industry
* getting the latest on a celebrity or event
* keeping tabs on your favorite sports teams

Once on the site you will see the following dialog box:


Image

For this example, I want to check Craigslist for a hydraulic Press and have Google Alerts email me when any ad on Craigslist contain those 2 words.

So lets fill in the boxes:


Image

In the first box I enter the words "hydraulic press" followed by the following: "site:houston.craigslist.org".

The phrase "site:houston.craigslist.org" tells Google that I only want to have Google search Craigslist for the 2 words "hydraulic press". If I wanted to check another web site, I would substitute a valid web site after the term "site:"

The "Comprehensive" type search will give you a lot of details.
"Once a Day" will send you an email once a day with your custom search results, if there are any.
"Email length" tells Google how many search results to email you.
"Deliver to" is where you want your search results emailed to.

After you click on "Create Alert", you will typically immediately get an email from Google with results based on their current search database. The following is a result from the above alert:


Google Web Alert for: hydraulic press site:http://houston.craigslist.org

 

Mills, Lathe, CNC's, Moving Shop
Hydraulic Press, Grinders a lot of tools, If you are needing machine tools to make money don't pass this up you may not kick yourself but the people you ...
Contents of small fitness center
FULL HYDRAULIC RESISTANCE CIRCUIT: Leg Press, 2 Ab/Back Machine, Inner/Outer Thigh, Squat, Overhead Press, Row Machine, Bicep/Tricep, Leg Extension, ...

 


 

To manage your alerts once you have created on, go to this link:
http://www.google.com/alerts/manage

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Last Updated on Monday, 25 January 2010 13:49
 
Can Your Facebook Friends Sink Your Credit Score?
Written by Chris Muncy   
Tuesday, 26 January 2010 20:14

Want more proof that there is a downside to social networking? Look no further than the latest nitwit banking industry scheme to determine your creditworthiness.

InternetEvolution.com blogger Rob Salkowitz recently posted an outstanding summary of the latest data-mining trend: using social networking data to assess credit risk.

If your Facebook friends are deadbeats, it might be harder for you to get a credit card or mortgage, according to a recent report on the banking industry site, CreditCards.com.

That’s right: Some banks are turning to social media analytics firms to help enhance their credit-check procedures by looking at an applicant’s profile, behavior, and associations on sites like Facebook, Twitter Inc. , and MySpace . The theory is that people run with folks who share their values and behavior -- birds of a feather, and all that. You might even say "guilt by association," but that would be unkind.

Salkowitz's source is a news article on CreditCards.com that provides a wealth of additional details. But here's the gist: "The presumption is that if those in your network are responsible cardholders, there is a better chance you will be, too.

"So, if a bank is on the fence about whether to extend you credit, you may become eligible if those in your network are good credit customers."

Lenders are eager to spin this insanity as a legitimate risk-assessment technique. Lending Club executive Rob Garcia, for example, says that a Facebook user whose home address does not match the address on an application "could be a red flag." He also asserts that people who have large networks "get funded two to three times faster than without."

I'm ready to throw a few red flags here myself. The most obvious snag concerns a lender's ability to prove that someone on a social networking site -- or that someone's friends -- are who they claim to be. Most of us know that a Web search on our names will turn up dozens or even hundreds of virtual doppelgangers; without a Social Security Number or other unique identification, how is it possible to tell any of them apart with certainty?

Sooner or later, somebody will realize they were denied credit based on another person's social networking data. Normally, I'm not a fan of rampant litigation, but in this case I can't wait to see a little carnage in the courts.

Let's also consider the fact that lenders want to position this as a "whitelist" technique that can only work to an applicant's advantage. Unfortunately, the data-mining techniques being used here are utterly opaque to consumers, as are lenders' policies regarding how, when, and why they consider this sort of information.

Soon, I'm sure we will see the usual bottom-feeding "credit repair experts" offering to build credit-friendly social networking profiles for a not-so-reasonable fee. The thing is, given the sort of information lenders are apparently mining from these sites, it just might work.

Many people already understand that their social networking activity can draw unwanted attention from employers. Make a joke about taking one bong hit too many last weekend, and you can wave goodbye to that big job interview.

When credit issuers start snooping around, however, it's a different matter entirely. This isn't a question of making common-sense decisions about what you post online. These companies are using actual social networking relationships to make business decisions.

As Rob Salkowitz points out, it is hard to see any way out of this dead-end except through regulation. In the meantime, if you use a social networking site, I suggest checking -- and rechecking -- your privacy settings.

Ultimately, however, the only way to opt out of this sort of buffoonery might be to "opt out" of certain social networking sites entirely.

 

Source: Matthew McKenzie @ Smart Biz Resource

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Burn your Joomla! Blog feeds with Feedburner
Written by Gregory Feathers   
Tuesday, 19 January 2010 23:18

Google FeedburnerIf you run a Joomla! website and use it as a blog you probably want to syndicate your article feeds to readers. Unfortunately the core Joomla! system doesn't give many options to how feeds are created. The easiest way to syndicate articles from different sections and catagories is to install the Ninja RSS Syndicator (Formally BCA RSS Syndicator) and burn your RSS feeds with Feedburner. Once you have your feed submitted to Feedburner there are some tricks to make your site function properly and grade correctly as a Blog with Website Grader.

Edit your .htaccess file to redirect the default Joomla! feed url's to FeedBurner:

RewriteEngine On

# Feedburner
RewriteCond %{QUERY_STRING} ^format=feed&type=rss$
RewriteRule ^index\.php$ http://feeds.feedburner.com/FEEDNAME [R=301,L]

Finally edit your Joomla! template and place the following code inside the head tag:

link href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/FEEDNAME" type="application/rss+xml" rel="alternate"

Make sure to replace FEEDNAME with the correct name for your feed.

There you go, your RSS feeds are burned and you can start publicizing your website's content through RSS.

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Last Updated on Tuesday, 19 January 2010 23:20
 
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