Based on our record, TinEye seems to be a lot more popular than OwlOCR. While we know about 922 links to TinEye, we've tracked only 4 mentions of OwlOCR. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I have a bit of an image-hoarding obsession and spend a lot of time researching pictures I find online in great depth. This involves using sites like tineye.com, Reddit, and Pinterest to identify the source of an image, then tracking down the history, maker, and theory behind it. It's all hobby-based - mainly focused on art, photography, museum oddities, antiques, and fashion that I like. Basically anything... Source: 7 months ago
Used TinEyeto find other places these images ate shared on. No results yet. Source: 7 months ago
Your post has been removed as it's a repost from the past month or one of the top post of all time. Please avoid re-posting memes. Please check http://karmadecay.com, https://tineye.com , or the Google's "Similar Image" search in the future before posting. All of those miss things, but it's a great start. Also make sure to use the search button and check through this link: www.reddit.com/r/im14andthisisdeep/top... Source: 8 months ago
Reposts from the past three months or from the top posts of all time are not allowed. To check if your submission has already been posted here, use KarmaDecay, TinEye, or Google's "Search by image" feature before posting. Source: 11 months ago
Include your submission source in your post's comments. When linking your source, please post it as a top-level comment (directly on the post itself and not replying to another comment) and include one of the following keywords (not case-sensitive): source, original, or credit. Repeatedly breaking this rule may subject you to a temporary ban. You may use sources such as TinEye and Google Image Search to help you... Source: 12 months ago
If you own a Mac, you can just export all files into PDFs and use a free OCR tool called OwlOCR to make your pdf readable. Import it to other apps and voilà, you have all your notes that are ready to go. Source: 10 months ago
I use a free app, OwlOCR, for OCRing image files on Mac. Source: almost 2 years ago
OwlOCR ($13.99) - OCR for images, pdfs, QR code, and anything on screen. Source: about 2 years ago
Data structure and customised database was more paramount for me than OCR search. Hence, I went with Notion. But If I need OCR I use OwlOCR. https://owlocr.com/. Source: over 2 years ago
Google Images - Google Images is a search service owned by Google that allows users to search the World Wide Web for image content.
TextSniper - Instantly extract any text from your Mac's screen
SauceNAO - SauceNAO is a reverse image search engine.
Nanonets OCR - Intelligent text extraction using OCR and deep learning
Yandex.Images - search for images on the internet, search by image
Nanonets - Worlds best image recognition, object detection and OCR APIs. NanoNets’ platform makes it straightforward and fast to create highly accurate Deep Learning models.