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AI powered
OCR PDF in Linux
Easily Convert Images to Text with OCR on Linux
or drag and drop a file
Supports all image, video and audio formats, up to 100MB and 1 hour recording
By using the product, you agree to our Terms of Service and have read our Privacy Policy.
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Frequently Asked Questions
The OCR tool for Linux allows you to extract text from image files like JPG, PNG, and more, using Optical Character Recognition (OCR) technology.
Upload your image to the tool. It uses OCR to recognize and extract text, offering plain text output that you can download or copy.
You can upload common image formats such as JPG, PNG, GIF, BMP, WebP, TIFF, and more. Each file must be under 100 MB.
Yes, the tool supports multiple languages and can convert Urdu text from images, though the accuracy may depend on the text clarity.
The tool uses OCR technology to detect and convert text within images to editable plain text you can copy or download.
This browser-based tool requires an internet connection and does not support command line usage directly from Linux terminals.
No, an internet connection is necessary as the OCR processing occurs online. Results can be downloaded for offline use afterward.
No, the tool only extracts plain text without preserving the original document's layout or formatting.
No, you can only upload image files. For PDFs, convert pages to images or take screenshots to use with this tool.
The tool provides plain text output. You can view it, copy to clipboard, download, or save to Evernote if logged in.
The tool can recognize handwritten text, but accuracy varies depending on the quality and clarity of the handwriting.
Yes, you can upload multiple files simultaneously, with a combined text output after processing.
The maximum file size for each image is 100 MB, ensuring efficient processing and extraction of text.
Yes, logged-in users can save extracted text directly to their Evernote accounts for easy access and management.
OCR focuses on text extraction and does not retain document layouts or styles, ensuring straightforward plain text outputs.