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> You could wait until the new administration comes in next January and > ask the Feds again. You might get a friendlier and more helpful answer. <g>
Unfortunately, the documents were only handed over by the current corrupt administration. They were produced by the previous corrupt administration. It is unlikely that a subsequent corrupt administration will give me a better answer. :-)
> Meanwhile, can't you just print the document, then scan the printed > pages and OCR them?
Unfortunately, not. They pages are are odd sized and oversized. Shrinking and printing to ledger sized paper makes them illegible.
faceman28...@yahoo.com wrote: >> You could wait until the new administration comes in next January and >> ask the Feds again. You might get a friendlier and more helpful answer. <g>
> Unfortunately, the documents were only handed over by the current > corrupt administration. They were produced by the previous corrupt > administration. It is unlikely that a subsequent corrupt > administration will give me a better answer. :-)
>> Meanwhile, can't you just print the document, then scan the printed >> pages and OCR them?
> Unfortunately, not. They pages are are odd sized and oversized. > Shrinking and printing to ledger sized paper makes them illegible.
Well, you could tile them, but then you'd be stuck with stitching the scanned lines back together. Frankly, for 20 pages, the easiest solution is to type them--yourself if you're proficient or hiring a typist if you're not. Try your local craigslist. Sometimes brute force is the most sensible way to go.
On Mar 11, 10:02 am, "faceman28...@yahoo.com" <faceman28...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Mar 10, 4:38 pm, "Don Schmidt" <Don Engin...@PNB.Retired_1987> > wrote:
> > If you would like, send me a copy of thepdffile and I'll try to extract > > with a Tools program.
> Thanks. However, I ended up going to the C++ compiler and doing a Q&D > to get them out. It turned out to be quite easy.
You may try Advanced PDF Repair at http://www.datanumen.com/apdfr/ This tool is rather useful in salvaging damaged PDF documents. And maybe it can remove the password protection, too.