Quote:
Originally Posted by rhewes
I've been working on a similar project of converting pBooks to eBooks. I bought a double sided scanner (Fujitsu Scan...something) and scanned in both sides of the page at the same time. [Note, I did destroy the book in order to get the pages into the scanner.] All in all, it took me about 2 hours to scan everything in, combine the chapters into a single PDF file and then OCR the entire set. I used Readris on my Mac to OCR and Preview to work with the PDF files.
I just got my Reader on Saturday, but the OCR text came back "OK" with an acceptable number of errors. I'm still playing with things, but looking at just the images of the book pages (re-sized to the Reader dimensions and stored in a PDF file) on my Sony Reader (505) seems to work great. There is a longer delay in loading the page, and I can't change the font size, but I can still read the book. Much nicer than lugging the big book around with my computer, etc. on trips.
Couldn't find an eBook of the series anywhere, so I opted for the old fashioned way...a used pBook and a knife. 
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I have the exact same setup!
I use the fujitsu Snap Scan Scanner on my mac. I scan at about 40-50 pages per time. Thus I have about 5-6 pdf's of about 50 pages.
Then I use Adobe to merge all the files into one.
I tried ReadIris but found that it had way too many errors.
So I transfer the final pdf to my parallels with Abby finereader on it. I then use that to do the OCR and it is virtually perfect! Then I am saving as a rtf file and using calibre to import onto the sony.
Working great so far!!!