![]() ![]() Scannable’s default format is JPEG, which I guess can be good enough to share documents as images over text message, but I want my digitized documents to be scannable thanks to OCR in Evernote (also why I don’t need OCR to happen locally in my scanner app I own a premium Evernote account and Evernote does its own OCR in the cloud). I was surprised by Scannable’s speed and conversion engine. When you take a picture with Scannable, the app attempts to automatically detect borders of a document, cropping where necessary to make sure you end up with files that don’t show any backgrounds or external objects (as it’d be the case on a desk). Obviously, this works better if you’re taking pictures on a surface that provides good contrast with the color of the document, but, in my tests, Scannable also performed well when I tried to scan white A4 sheets on a slightly different shade of white. I appreciate the fact that Evernote tried to remove friction and manual user interaction from the Scannable experience. ![]()
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