 |
|
 |

OCR
Technology
by
ResumeEdge.com
- The Net's Premier Resume Writing and Editing Service
Optical
Character Recognition (OCR) was developed in the 70’s by Ray Kurzweil,
a graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Although Mr. Kurzweil’s intent was to develop a machine
(known as the Kurzweil Reading Machine) to help visually impaired
individuals read printed materials, OCR technology has since become
indispensable in modern business.
Generally
speaking, what OCR means to the modern job hunter is that initially
a computer, not a human being, will be scanning the resume for
appropriate content. Since
machines are not impressed by font styles and other formatting
enhancements, content is all-important, as is the presentation
of your document in a scanner-friendly manner.
With computer technology changing daily, "scanner-friendly"
may mean a document stripped of all formatting and enhancements,
or one that bears some formatting that can be read by the more
modern software.
However,
regardless of which format is used, content is still essential,
beginning with keywords.
Keywords
|