Gboard S New Scan Text Ocr Tool Is My Favorite New Feature

Use the Scan Text Feature in Gboard on Android

Until now, you had to use the Google Lens app to scan text with your camera. Although useful, copying the scanned text, switching to another app, and pasting it into the desired field was a bit inconvenient. This is a major reason I didn’t use Google Lens that often. Now that this feature is available in the Gboard app, scanning and inputting text will be a fluid experience.
The Scan text feature is available in Gboard’s latest beta version 13.6 and higher, which can be downloaded from the Google Play Store. If you already have the beta, follow these steps to use it.
Gboard will continue to highlight the text after you have inserted it in case you want to use it again. You can use this feature on any app on your phone where there is a text field.

Use Cases for Scan Text on Gboard

Now there can be various scenarios where I think you might find this feature handy. I can already think of some right off the top of my head, and some I have been using for the last couple of days. I have listed them below:

If you are creating a shopping list, you can use it to directly scan the product name. It can help you remember exactly which brand item you have to buy. Students can use this feature to scan entire notes at once and save them instead of typing them out. You can use it to scan and insert details of someone from their business card right from the contacts app without needing to use Google Lens or your camera app. Take note of signs, menus, and other things you stumble across but want to remember later on. Since you can use this feature on any app, I can scan something interesting I come across while browsing the web and share it instantly in a chat window.

Limitations of Scan Text on Gboard

While the feature is helpful, it isn’t without its shortcomings. You should know them before getting your expectations too high.

After testing the feature for a couple of days, I can say that it struggles a lot when it comes to understanding handwritten text. As of now, it cannot recognize other languages besides English. Besides that, you cannot use it to initiate web searches for scanned texts or translate them in real-time, features that are part of Google Lens.

This brings us to the end of this article. As it’s evident from the limitations, this feature is not here to replace Google Lens. In my opinion, this feature should suffice for some basic OCR requirements.
While translation and search are available on Gboard, the extra steps you have to take don’t make it worth the effort. Still, I am happy to have this feature available, and I know for sure that I am going to be using it more frequently than Lens. What are your thoughts about the new Gboard feature? Let us know in the comments.