Timeline of optical character recognition

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This is a timeline of optical character recognition.

Time period Summary
1870–1931 Earliest ideas of optical character recognition (OCR) are conceived. Fournier d'Albe's Optophone and Tauschek's Reading Machine are developed as devices to help the blind read.[1]
1931–1954 First OCR tools are invented and applied in industry, able to interpret Morse code and read text out loud. The Intelligent Machines Research Corporation is the first company created to sell such tools.
1954–1974 The Optacon, the first portable OCR device, is developed. Similar devices are used to digitise Reader's Digest coupons and postal addresses. Special typefaces are designed to facilitate scanning.[1][2][3]
1974–2000 Scanners are used massively to read price tags and passports.[4] Companies such as Caere Corporation, ABBYY and Kurzweil Computer Products Inc, are created. The latter one develops the first omni-font OCR software, capable of reading any text document.[5]
2000–2016 OCR software is made available online for free, through products like Adobe Acrobat, WebOCR, and Google Drive.[6][7]

Timeline

See also

References

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