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  2. Project Naptha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Naptha

    Project Naptha is a browser extension software for Google Chrome that allows users to highlight, copy, edit and translate text from within images. [1] It was created by developer Kevin Kwok, [2] and released in April 2014 as a Chrome add-on. This software was first made available only on Google Chrome, downloadable from the Chrome Web Store.

  3. Wu Dao - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wu_Dao

    WuDao Corpora (also written as WuDaoCorpora), as of version 2.0, was a large dataset constructed for training Wu Dao 2.0. It contains 3 terabytes of text scraped from web data, 90 terabytes of graphical data (incorporating 630 million text/image pairs), and 181 gigabytes of Chinese dialogue (incorporating 1.4 billion dialogue rounds). [19]

  4. Beijing Academy of Artificial Intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beijing_Academy_of...

    WuDao has demonstrated ability to perform natural language processing and image recognition, in addition to generation of text and images. [2] The model can not only write essays, poems and couplets in traditional Chinese, it can both generate text based on static images and generate nearly photorealistic images based on natural language ...

  5. Copyfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyfish

    After a user marks the text in an image, Copyfish extracts it from a website, video or PDF document. [3] [4] Copyfish was first published in October 2015. [5] [6] Copyfish is not only used in Western countries but despite being available only with an English user interface, is used by many Chinese and Hindi-speaking Chrome users.

  6. Chinese computational linguistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_computational...

    However, Chinese proper nouns are usually not marked in any style. [19] Recognition of names of people and place in Chinese text can be supported by a list of names. However such a list can never be complete, considering the huge number of places and people all over the world, not to mention their dynamic feature of coming, changing and going.

  7. Comparison of optical character recognition software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_optical...

    This comparison of optical character recognition software includes: . OCR engines, that do the actual character identification; Layout analysis software, that divide scanned documents into zones suitable for OCR

  8. Dragon NaturallySpeaking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragon_NaturallySpeaking

    Dragon NaturallySpeaking uses a minimal user interface. As an example, dictated words appear in a floating tooltip as they are spoken (though there is an option to suppress this display to increase speed), and when the speaker pauses, the program transcribes the words into the active window at the location of the cursor.

  9. Tesseract (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesseract_(software)

    Tesseract is an optical character recognition engine for various operating systems. [5] It is free software, released under the Apache License. [1] [6] [7] Originally developed by Hewlett-Packard as proprietary software in the 1980s, it was released as open source in 2005 and development was sponsored by Google in 2006.