Scanning Books

For the last few months, I’ve been creating a digest for each book I finish reading. Doing this has many pros, but the significant time it takes has been too big of a con. I started searching for ways to do it more efficiently. Many of the books I read don’t have digital or e‑book versions, and I decided to start with this, the most difficult use case.

I discovered that digitization of printed material is a known problem, and various solutions are available. The solution I’m most impressed with is scanners designed specifically for books. A few companies, such as ScanSnap and Czur, have products that do a great job. Some people have reviewed these products and publicly posted the digital books they created with them (see here, for example). Some people have even gone to the trouble of building homemade book scanners (see here).

I’m going to try to find one of these scanners to test locally. I want to see for myself how good a job they do and whether the digital files they create are searchable. If they pass that test, I’ll move to the next step in creating book digests more efficiently.