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Sebastian Lorentz🙏 60 karmaSep 14, 2025@TidyDocsI was part of the beta trials and TidyDocs has made it so much easier to manage my receipts and invoices.
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OpenHi all, I am the founder of Futurwise, and we build this tool to help people keep up-to-date on fast-changing topics as the world is changing so incredibly fast. Our objective is to build a next gen media platform and help anyone cut through the noise of information overload and find your next insight faster. At the moment, we do that with an MVP focused on super fast summaries of many types of content but from trusted sources, available with one click, in your style and language. Ready in under 5 seconds, regardless of content type. Securely stored in your private library. Distraction free, no ads, forever. As we collapse hours into seconds and keep professionals aligned on what matters across 25 languages and trusted sources, we envision helping individuals, enterprises and global societies increase awareness on fast changing topics, such as emerging technologies, climate change or healthcare, that will affect humanity in the long run. I hope you enjoy our app! -
This tool is different. I was impressed with its ability to process different file formats and the quality delivered.
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Good. But there should be options to move questions to google form or Microsoft form so that as a teacher I can take exam
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Private Q&A with your Documents on Windows or Mac.Open -
I work with a large volume of documents. Documind is my salvation. The truly affordable price, speed, and quality of the chat result are impressive
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I’ve been using it for a month now and I have decided to keep it for a year. There definitely are some kinks they can still work out like file management, but it’s very good at it’s core function: it generally does a good job answering questions and most times identifies PDFs automatically and correctly. The browser plugin works great, and it’s very nice that Papers allows you to add your university’s library API so you can automatically download PDFs that are accessible through your institution (sometimes it refuses to download some papers, so you just have to downlow it yourself and manually add it). The iPad and Android apps are serviceable. Every once in a while it will mess up the PDF identification, especially with papers from either very old sources or online-only journals. Things they must work on: * A much better system to annotate PDFs (the post-it type notes are cumbersome). * Introduce a notepad attached to each PDF or some way to easily link and save the AI’s output to the PDF. Currently, you have to add a little post it note and then paste the text there. * Keep the AI answers available after closing the documents. If you close the document by mistake or have several open and wish to close some, the ai conversation will be reset. * I REALLY wish that you could get citations and links to where the info was from extracted from PDFs. Currently, I have found Coral.ai does a much better job of showing you where the info came from and it even highlights it for you. Give it a try, their 30-day no credit card needed trial allowed me to truly test it, and now I’m a yearly subscriber looking forward for new additions and releases.
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Highly recommend it for anyone dealing with high-volume document processing. Simplifies the process of extracting data from multiple PDFs into clean, accurate spreadsheets.
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Such an impressive platform for all of us who are looking for more efficient ways to do the investigation. OpenRead has the potential to solve our problems.
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