Microsoft Excel Can Now Turn Pictures of Tables Into Actual, Editable Tables (thurrott.com) 82
Microsoft has rolled out a new feature to Excel's Android app that makes it easy to capture data. From a report: Excel now lets you take pictures of a document/paper in real life, crop the picture, and turn that into an actual, editable data on Excel. After capturing the data, you can edit the data to make sure Excel's image recognition is 100% accurate, and make any changes if some of the scanned data were incorrect. The company says it will roll out this feature to Excel for iOS app soon.
Obligatory xkcd (Score:5, Funny)
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And no, xkcd, everybody doesn't do that.
It's a joke, jokes don't have to be 100% accurate descriptions of reality.
In fact if all jokes have to be 100% accurate descriptions of reality, after a while they might... stop being funny.
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Enough to be annoying. Heck I get emails, with a screen shots of the scan of a fax one has received, of an excel file.
I can barely read it myself, and for some reason the senders seem reluctant to send them the excel file, mostly because they don't know how to attach one, but they are able to go to insane methods to give me an unreadable images.
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Now if they could try adding in something simple, which would probably take the right developer less than a day to create and test (because it's already built into VBA), like regex support in the find box....
RE: Microsoft Excel Can Now Turn Pictures of Table (Score:3)
I totally read that as edible tables.
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Definitely not alone. I was all excited to mail my boss edible excel reports.
I can't imagine Microsoft would make very tasty tables even if they could make edible tables. They'd probably be old fashioned from expired ingredients- and you'd have to eat them with three fingers.
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Yes, edible table put out by Iodine Bucks the same guy that makes the pepperoni plates.
Why, because traditional tables are stupid!
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I totally read that as edible tables.
Me too. Then I thought about edible underwear. I'm sick.
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Me too. Then I thought about edible underwear. I'm sick.
You shouldn't eat them off "working women" if you don't want to get sick.
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Me too. Then I thought about edible underwear. I'm sick.
You shouldn't eat them off "working women" if you don't want to get sick.
I'm speechless.
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I initially read it as turning pictures of tablets into actual, editable tablets. It made absolutely no sense to me until I came back a few hours later and re-read the headline.
Broken. (Score:1)
Fed it all of these: https://unsplash.com/search/photos/table
Bunch of garbage - didn't convert a single one into anything that made sense at all.
Someone has to ask... (Score:2)
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Because Microsoft has had an Office suite monopoly for soooo looooong that they haven't needed to actually innovate until now.
Yes, that is my view as well.
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I'm curious how well it translates on a mobile device. I've used OCR on PDF and Word documents that were just images and even when the text was perfectly legible it had a hard time getting the letters right and the formatting was always all over the place.
Re:Someone has to ask... (Score:5, Interesting)
Easy answer...It is HARD. OCR [wikipedia.org] has been around for years but even today it is hit or miss except for the most sophisticated systems. I'm curious how well it translates on a mobile device. I've used OCR on PDF and Word documents that were just images and even when the text was perfectly legible it had a hard time getting the letters right and the formatting was always all over the place.
Pretty sure the OCR will not be done on your device, but elsewhere.
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> Pretty sure the OCR will not be done on your device, but elsewhere.
C'mon, just say it already. Microsoft is only doing this because they want to look at those numbers. This is Slashdot, nobody's going to think any less of you for suggesting MS (sorry, "M$") wants to spy on you and your data like it was Google.
But I wasn't meaning to suggest that. Microsoft are far more toward the Apple side of the equation than the Google side. They really only want to look at your data to 1) Sell you more of their own products and 2) Make their products better.
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Easy answer...It is HARD. OCR [wikipedia.org] has been around for years but even today it is hit or miss except for the most sophisticated systems.
Yes, generalized OCR is hard. But the problem gets much easier if you limit the "alphabet" of characters you're trying to recognize. Ten digits plus comma, space and perhaps currency symbols is a much smaller alphabet than full unicode, or even just ASCII.
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It's not that hard. I used Fine Reader to OCR stuff more than a decade ago and it worked well enough on printed text to be very useful. Complex layout with tables, multiple columns of text and so on could be a challenge, but knowing it's supposed to be an Excel table, combined with a decade of neural net development, it should've been relatively trivial.
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even today it is hit or miss except for the most sophisticated systems.
I don't know, Google translate does a really, really good job figuring out what I'm trying to write, sometimes even when I write the wrong character.
Why mobile only? (Score:4, Interesting)
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And this despite their signature Windows device having not 1 but 2 cameras on it.
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Damn English and its stupid homynyms....
It's probably cheaper just to go to the furniture store than pay for a Microsoft Office subscription.
PDFs (Score:5, Interesting)
Can the PC version excel do this with PDF files? That should be a lot easier.
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That said, if you do this with any regularity, ABBYY FineReader (especially version 8 which is tough to find) works marvelously - probably better than any add-on feature in excel
I've had to spend many hours doing this on large quantities of bank/brokerage statements in the context of consulting engagements
WUT? (Score:1)
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Because Excel will give you a 2D representation to work with from the cropped picture; to use 3D modeling program, you need to take photos of the table from multiple perspectives, in order to build a 3D model.
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Big fricking deal (Score:5, Interesting)
So you can convert an image of numbers into data in a spreadsheet? It's a trivial improvement on something we have been able to do for decades.
Wake me up when the software can discover the relationship between the columns in the table, and insert the appropriate cell-references and math operations.
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Thinking in terms of "discovering the relationship" is old-fashioned thinking, today's advanced software can automatically try every possible relationship and use a crowd-sourced technique to determine the most popular of all possible underlying data models.
And column summation errors can now be introduced automatically to eliminate any legal respons
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Taken from a Big Bang Theory episode? (Score:3)
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Dumnnnn (Score:3)
How about adding a spreadsheet diff tool that isn't a useless piece of shit designed without usability in mind?
Automatic conversions (Score:2)
can you trust these results? (Score:1)
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Accuracy vs Semantics (Score:1)
After capturing the data, you can edit the data to make sure Excel's image recognition is 100% accurate
Obviously the point is that the image recognition is NOT 100% accurate, otherwise you wouldn't need to edit the data. Otherwise my 2002 Volvo is a self-driving car, notwithstanding the minor course corrections I need to constantly make to make sure its self-driving capability is 100% accurate.