Activate
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Select this check box to activate the image management configuration.
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Deskew
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Select this check box to automatically deskew pages that are scanned with a
slant. Click the browse button (...) to configure
settings for this option.
- Fast deskew
- Select this check box to rotate the image clockwise or counter
clockwise.
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Threshold angle — If the original image
is skewed by an amount that is between
Minimum and
Maximum then the image is rotated.
However, if the original image skew angle does not fall between
the Minimum and
Maximum range, the image is not
rotated at all.
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Document type — Different rotation
algorithm is applied depending on whether the image is
Text only image or Text and
pictures image.
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Fill areas exposed after
rotation — Select this check box to fill the exposed
areas of the rotated image with black after the deskew
operation.
- Precision deskew
- Clear the Fast deskew check box for more
advanced deskew options.
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Threshold angle — If the original image
is skewed by an amount that is between
Minimum and
Maximum then the image is rotated.
However, if the original image skew angle does not fall between
the Minimum and
Maximum range, the image is not
rotated at all.
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Deskew angle — Rotate the image if the
original image is skewed up to this
Maximum angle. The maximum rotation is
limited to 45 degrees in either direction.
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Precision — This parameter lets you
control the granularity precision by which the deskew operation
is performed. To improve the quality of deskew operation, set
this parameter to a smaller value. The precision cannot be more
than the Deskew Angle.
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Interpolation when
rotating — Interpolation is an imaging method to
increase or decrease the number of pixels in a digital image.
How smoothly images appear without introducing jaggies depends
on the sophistication of the interpolation algorithm. You can
choose the Bilinear or Bicubic
algorithm, or None for no interpolation when
rotating the image.
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Document type — Different rotation
algorithm is applied depending on whether the image is
Text only image or Text and
picture image.
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Fill areas exposed after
rotation — Select this check box to fill the exposed
areas of rotated image with black after the deskew
operation.
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Despeckle
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Select this check box to remove undesired dots and speckles from black and
white images, such as FAX transmissions or scanned documents.
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Smooth text
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Select this check box to smooth and fill in patchy black and white
images.
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Trim edges
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Select this check box to trim blank space from the edges of scanned
documents. Click the browse button (...) to set the
threshold for the Trim edges option.
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Remove dots
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Select this check box to remove dots and speckles of various sizes. Click
the browse button (...) to specify maximum dot height
and width. This is similar to the Despeckle option,
although it allows more control as to which dots to remove. Certain images
might have larger dots that would not be removed by the despeckle
option.
There is possibility of removing certain portions of an image
if you set the maximum dot height and width too high.
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Remove hole punches
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Select this check box to remove hole punch marks from a black and white
image. Click the browse button (...) to specify
maximum hole punch height and width and the hole punch location. Hole
punches can be located at top, bottom, left or right of the image. The
default hole punch location is set to left side of the image.
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Remove lines
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Select this check box to remove unwanted horizontal and/or vertical lines in
a black and white image by specifying the line attributes. Click the browse
button (...) to specify minimum and maximum line
widths and the line orientation. The Max line width
can be configured to be between 0 and 0.1 inch. The default orientation is
horizontal.
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Remove borders
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Select this check box to remove black borders from
black and white images. This occurs often when the scanned document is
smaller than the resulting scanned image.
Click the browse button (...) to set parameters for
border removal:
- White noise specifies the amount of white noise
tolerated when determining the border.
- Border variance specifies the mount of variance
tolerated in the border. The value should be higher the more the border
varies in thickness.
- Border area specifies the percentage of the page
from each edge that is designated as the search area for borders to
remove.
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Remove empty pages
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Select this check box to remove pages that do not have any text or images.
An empty does not mean a uniformly white page (or any other color) page.
Click the browse button (...) to specify content that
can be ignored when the Professional Image Management component determines
whether a page is blank. You may find that one of the two following methods
works better than the other.
- Use basic empty page detector
Choose this empty page detection method to use basic detection. This may work better for images that are primarily graphic rather than textual.
Option |
Description |
Ignore noise on page |
Select this check box to allow noise on blank pages. Image noise is random variation of brightness or color information not present in imaged object. This is cleared by default. |
Ignore lines on page |
Select this check box to allow lines on blank pages. This is cleared by default. |
Ignore bleed-through on page |
Select this check box to allow bleed-through on blank pages. This is cleared by default. |
Ignore page area outside defined margins (in pixels) |
Select this check box to allow content outside of specified margins on an otherwise blank page. This is cleared and the margins are all set to 0 by default. |
Required detection accuracy (percentage) |
You can adjust the blank page detection accuracy if not all blank pages are being detected. For example, if detection occurs at 98.4% accuracy, you can set this to 98% to allow processing to complete normally. The default is 100%. |
Sensitivity |
This is an abstract sensitivity scale. You can adjust
it up or down depending on results. The default is
50. |
Trim treshold |
Specify the intensity of the page where the edge is
trimmed. |
- Use OCR empty page detection
- Choose this empty page detection method to use Optical Character Recognition detection. This may work better for images that are primarily textual rather than graphic.
Option |
Description |
Ignore page area outside defined margins (in pixels) |
Select this check box to allow content outside of specified margins on an otherwise blank page. |
Sensitivity |
This is an abstract sensitivity scale. You can adjust it up or down depending on results. The default is 50. |
The Remove empty pages options can be used in
multipage TIFF files and does not apply to any other supported formats of
this component.
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Remove first page
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Select this check box to remove the first page from the image. Note that
this option takes precedence over other options.
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Auto binarization
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Select this check box to convert the image into a binary format. The
supported file types for the image are PDF and TIFF.
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PDF Load Options
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Use the same horizontal and vertical — Select this check box to use only one value for both
horizontal and vertical resolutions.
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Horizontal resolution (DPI) and
Vertical resolution (DPI) — These combo boxes
allow you to set up horizontal and vertical resolution of opened files in
DPI. You can enter the value manually or select one of the predefined
values: 72, 96, 150, 200, 300, or 600. The default value is 150 DPI for
both vertical and horizontal resolutions.
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Color depth (BPP) — Set up color depth of PDF
documents manually or select one of the predefined values: 1, 8, or 24.
For example, 24 BPP (bits per pixel) denotes true color images, 1 BPP
denotes black-and-white images. The default value is 24 BPP.
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Text anti-aliasing (bits) — Enter the level of text anti-aliasing manually or select one of the
predefined values: 1 (means no anti-aliasing), 2, or 4 (gives maximum anti-aliasing). The default value is 4 bit.
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Graphic anti-aliasing (bits) — Enter the level of graphics anti-aliasing manually or select one of
the predefined values: 1 (means no anti-aliasing), 2, or 4 (gives maximum anti-aliasing). The default value is 1 bit.
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