OCR technology has come a loooooong way the last couple of years. My company is implementing it for AP invoices. Scan the invoice and the OCR technology pulls the date, vendor name, address, invoice number, invoice amount, tax, etc. You can imagine the complexity of the technology when almost every company uses a different invoice type, size, font, etc.
Lilliputians gotta eat too.There's a little man in the machine that checks all cash and check deposited.
Well, that man could be 6' 1" 230 lb. and sitting in Indiana. What he eats, I have no idea.There's a little man in the machine that checks all cash and check deposited.
What tool are you using? Sounds very interesting. I am horrified by the number of faxed invoices we still receive. Fax needs to be put to pasture. D:
Yup. I love this, but now I don't even have to go to the bank with the mobile app.Chase ATMs are awesome for this. You can put in a whole stack of checks at a time. It reads all the info and even prints out a nice little picture of each check on your reciept. I haven't filled out a deposit slip in ages.
Yup. I love this, but now I don't even have to go to the bank with the mobile app.
I would double check your total. The one day I didn't write the total, the reader missed one. May happen more often but they usually have my total to compare to.Chase ATMs are awesome for this. You can put in a whole stack of checks at a time. It reads all the info and even prints out a nice little picture of each check on your reciept. I haven't filled out a deposit slip in ages.
OCR is one thing and it's been around for many years but what I find impressive (and didn't know if I could believe it) is the ability for software to convert hand written figures into digital ones.Its the same type of system they use at a bank to process checks. Its scanned and the data is read by their computer systems. Human eyes rarely(almost never) look at checks when they are processed unless you go to the bank its drawn on and get it cashed.
I wonder if there's software that will read a scanned handwritten document into a digital one. Never heard of that.
