![]() In addition, integrations with apps such as Outlook, Microsoft Teams, Gmail, and Excel, allow you to easily continue working with your favorite tools directly within the platform. also offers dedicated solutions, such as monday dev and monday sales CRM, designed to answer the needs of specific industries. PrecisionOCR is an easy-to-use, secure and HIPAA-compliant cloud-based optical character recognition (OCR) platform that organizations and providers can user to extract medical meaning from unstructured health care documents. Our OCR tooling leverages machine learning (ML) and natural language processing (NLP) to power semi-automatic and automated transformations of source material, such as pdfs and images, into structured data records. These records integrate seamlessly with EMR data using the HL7s FHIR standards to make the data searchable and centralized alongside other patient health information. Our health OCR technology can be accessed directly in a simple web-UI or the tooling can be used via integrations with API and CLI support on our open healthcare platform. ![]() We partner directly with PrecisionOCR customers to build and maintain custom OCR report extractors, which intelligently look for the most critical health data points in your health documents to cut through the noise that comes with pages of health information. PrecisionOCR is also the only self-service capable health OCR tool, allowing teams to easily test the technology for their task workflows.Not to derail this thread, but I’m wondering if you might say more about MarginNote vs. LiquidText I just bought an iPad Pro mostly because I’ve become very enamored of LiquidText and wanted more room to work (and also because the Macbook Pros are simply too expensive for what they are). MarginNote looks similar, but with a Mac app and maybe more polished UI, with a heftier price tag. I’ve been with LiquidText since the first beta, and have admired how it has evolved – with increasing polish and features attentive to how users actually work. #Liquidtext vs marginnote 3 pdfĪs a PDF annotation tool, I don’t think it can be beat. There is a bit of a downside in getting notes and comments out of the app. Export is all-or-nothing – and only exports to PDF, DOCX, or the LiquidText custom document format. I prefer my notes separated into individual documents or nodes in an OPML outline. If someone doesn’t need that, then LiquidText is fine. I’d mention that the absence of Mac version is no problem now that we have Universal Clipboard and apps such as Copied. It’s easy to put all of one’s notes on the clipboard on an iPad and then open Tinderbox on the desktop and paste (and perhaps explode) the notes. MarginNote is sort of like LiquidText but maybe the overlap is more in the order of 50% or so. As I mentioned in the other thread, I love MarginNote’s ability to quickly consolidate multiple documents into a single “notebook”. If I have 5 or 10 related documents in the same topical notebook, I can easily make an outline or mind map in MarginNote and link together clippings / notes / images / scribbles from across all those documents into one mind map. MarginNote is also better for research – text in a document can be selected and a browser opened to find additional web content related to that text. MarginNote has a much broader set of features than LiquidText – and many more options for exporting notes. It is also a bit rougher around the edges – the UI is unusual and sometimes confusing. MN syncs via iCloud – WebDAV is coming soon they tell me – but to sync notebooks you have to make sure there is at least one annotation added to the notebook.
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