Bookscanner: Difference between revisions

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(Correct the command line for the tesseract)
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mogrify -verbose -rotate 90 *</pre></li>
mogrify -verbose -rotate 90 *</pre></li>
<li><p>Does Optical Character Recognition (OCR) on all images in folder:</p>
<li><p>Does Optical Character Recognition (OCR) on all images in folder:</p>
<pre>time for i in *tif; do b=&quot;basename $i .tif&quot;; tesseract -l spa &quot;$i&quot; “$b” pdf; done</pre></li>
<pre>time for i in *tif; do b=$(basename $i .tif); tesseract -l spa "$i" "$b" pdf; done</pre></li>
<li><p>Merges all the pdf files in folder into one single file:</p>
<li><p>Merges all the pdf files in folder into one single file:</p>
<pre>pdftk *pdf cat output book.pdf</pre></li>
<pre>pdftk *pdf cat output book.pdf</pre></li>

Revision as of 10:23, 14 October 2018

Kunlabora bookscanner building in progress right now! :) We are building this: https://forum.diybookscanner.org/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=333

Building a scanner

Here are two links to the public documentation of our scanner, built by Voja Antonic:

https://www.memoryoftheworld.org/blog/2012/10/28/our-beloved-bookscanner-2/

https://hackaday.io/project/5604-diy-book-scanner

We are trying to build something similar during the Kunlabora event in Calafou: https://calafou.org/en/content/kunlabora-ephimeral-projects-kooperative

We decided to build a more reproducible and portable and simple scanner: https://forum.diybookscanner.org/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=333

In theory for the simple scanner it should be possible to get all the ingredients from a hardware shop ("ferreteria"). We got most of the materials from Bauhaus in Barcelona (Zona Franca). TODO: list of materials, sources and prices.

Ideas for the building Voja's scanner

The electronics is not really documented (which means that it is hard to reproduce) and it is built from basic parts (which means that it takes a lot of time to put it together. So we try to use an Arduino-based solution instead. Arduino is a general-purpose programmable microcontroller that has already built-in many of the functions/parts we need. The idea is that this makes it easier for us to build the scanner and for others to reproduce it. We also have more experience working with Arduino than with only basic electronic components.

We will also try to use cheaper cameras in order to bring down the budget.

List of parts

From Bauhaus, Barcelona (Zona Franca):

- 2x Madera MDF 600x400x10cm
- 2x Madera MDF 600x400x16cm
- Varilla roscada
- 2x Tira LED 1 nice
- Multienchufa 5 tomas
- Base 4 tomas 1.5 mts
- Tuerca hexagonal
- Guia corredera
- 2x Arandela ancha
- Aldabon BPF 185 M
- Tornillo BPF
- 4x Abrazaderas
- Colgador acero negro
- Mostqueton-fw

Other things from other shops:

- 3x Cable USB 2.0 male-female @ Worten Sant Antoni
- 2x USB-A -> USB-B (mini) cables @ Tienda de Cables
- 2x Manfrotto brazo flexible MF237 (Nr. referencia AFP018036) @ FotoK, Ronda Universitat
- 2 x digital cameras (see below for background information): Canon IXUS 175 (Powershot / ELPH 180)
  - https://www.amazon.es/Canon-IXUS-175-compacta-estabilizador/dp/B01A8QU70I/
  - http://chdk.wikia.com/wiki/ELPH180
  - https://www.canon-europe.com/for_home/product_finder/cameras/digital_camera/ixus/ixus_175/specification.aspx
- 2 x gooseneck camera stand ("magic wand")
- 2 x plexi glass from a company in Igualada that J. found.

For electronic parts a good shop in Barcelona is Diotronic: https://diotronic.com/

Cameras

Summary of research about cameras for book scanners:

Basically there are three categories of cameras that can be used for book scanners (from cheapest to most expensive).

1. Remote control support

The cheapest option is any camera with remote trigger support, so we can take pictures without pushing the button on the camera. This is important because when you press the button the camera position may be disadjusted to the physical pressure.

2. CHDK firmware

Middle category is CHDK firmware compatibles. CHDK is a third party open source firmware that allows the customisation of cameras. CHDK firmware is for Canon Powershot cameras, which are the cheaper compact digital camera product line. We have 200 euros in the budget for cameras, so we went with this option.

3. Magic Lantern support

Magic Lantern is a third party open source firmware that is more advanced. However, it only works with Canon DLSR cameras (these are the cameras that have a reflex mirror to look at the shot through a small hole before you take the picture, and they usually have big lenses). The scanner we have now uses Canon 1100D, which are the cheapest type suported by Magic Lantern, but they still cost a few hundred euros.


Pictures Day 1 (temporary)


Scanning

The amount of work in the postproduction phase depends on how good quality images you can make in the scanning phase!

  1. Setting up the cameras: the most important part.

Caveats:

  • camera should look at right angle on the page
  • all the page should be in the image
  • camera settings: full automatic, perhaps with manual focus
  • back up and empty the SD cards in the cameras
  • most subtle mistake: one camera sees letters bigger than the other camera
  1. Push the big button on the scanner to scan.
  • maybe you have to put your finger to the side of the plexiglass which is closer to you when it is “down”, because the plexiglass is not always exactly the same angle as the book pages
  1. Download the images from the SD cards and put the scanner to sleep.
  • from the camera on the left, copy the images to a folder called “odd”
  • from the camera on the right, copy the images to a folder called “even”
  • upload the two folders now to to ftp://seldon.calafou/HackTheBiblio/scanning/<math>bookname--</math>yourname/ folder
  • remember to delete the pictures from the SD cards and put them back to the cameras, and maybe put the camera batteries to charge

Dependencies

There are many ways to scan, this is the current state of the art in Calafou.

Using an up-to-date Debian operating system, you can install the following programs for the postproduction steps:

  • scantailor
  • gprename
  • pdftk
  • tesseract-ocr
  • tesseract-ocr-eng
  • tesseract-ocr-spa
  • calibre

You can install all these programs with the following invocation:

sudo apt install scantailor gprename pdftk tesseract-ocr /
         tesseract-ocr-eng tesseract-ocr-spa calibre

Postproduction

You start with two folders with files like IMG_1234.JPG

The basic workflow is like this:

  1. [program] ➔ [output]
  2. gprename ➔ 1.jpg, 2.jpg, …
  3. scantailor ➔ 1.tif, 2.tif, …
  4. tesseract ➔ 1.pdf, 2.pdf, …
  5. pdftk ➔ book.pdf
  6. calibre ➔ book.epub
  7. libgen.org ➔ http://libgen.org/book/index.php?md5=B6916395FDE00D91DB4F52DCB8F069BF
  8. etc.

There are some bash oneliners which can be useful (on Debian based systems):

  1. FIXME we can probably write a script to rename the files properly… but for now, in gprename select the “numberical” tab, start = 1 for right-pages and 2 for left-pages, always step = 2.

  2. You can rotate the images appropriately (which is called “fix orientation” in scantailor) in the left/right folders before you import them. This is faster than in scantailor I think. However, you can also make the same operation in scantailor in a more user friendly way.

    sudo apt-get install imagemagick
    cd left
    mogrify -verbose -rotate 270 *
    cd ../right
    mogrify -verbose -rotate 90 *
  3. Does Optical Character Recognition (OCR) on all images in folder:

    time for i in *tif; do b=$(basename $i .tif); tesseract -l spa "$i" "$b" pdf; done
  4. Merges all the pdf files in folder into one single file:

    pdftk *pdf cat output book.pdf
  5. Exports the pdf metadata to a text file, to edit:

    pdftk book.pdf  dump_data output report.txt
  6. Imports the metadata of report.txt back on the pdf:

    pdftk book.pdf update_info report.txt output bookcopy.pdf

Distribution

Think about how people who would be interested in this book could know about it!

Repositories:

You may consider spreading the word on relevant mailing lists, social media, etc.

Biblio-graphy

About our book scanner

English

Spanish

Principal sources

Reading And Leading With One Laptop Per Child