You can watch as moving your cursor over a block of words changes it into the little I-beam. Interaction with this second type of text has always been a second class experience, the only way to search or copy a sentence from an image would be to do as the ancient monks did, manually transcribing regions of interest. Words on the web exist in two forms: there’s the text of articles, emails, tweets, chats and blogs- which can be copied, searched, translated, edited and selected- and then there’s the text which is shackled to images, found in comics, document scans, photographs, posters, charts, diagrams, screenshots and memes. The result is a seamless and intuitive experience, where you can highlight as well as copy and paste and even edit and translate the text formerly trapped within an image. Project Naptha automatically applies state-of-the-art computer vision algorithms on every image you see while browsing the web. ![]() Highlight, copy, edit, and translate text from any image on the web.
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