I use tailwind on all of my projects now and like it. I've used a lot of the css fads of the last decade (css in js was the worst which ironically is what the author recommends) and tailwind is the most ergonomic for me -and apparently most web devs considering how popular it is.
"Did you really say bundler?"
If you dont use a bundler this is a fair point. But I'm confident you do use one so adding tailwind is ~3 lines of code.
We have seen a lot of use cases in finance and are currently working with a few firms. Accuracy is generally their primary requirement. We've been focusing on not just accuracy but also the audit experience which includes confidence scoring. Your right about security and we are currently undergoing a soc 2 audit.
Generally firms are outsourcing the data entry and are already manually auditing with shortcuts like summing values.
Relating to formatted in the table they expected. We extract the data directly into their template format so it is always in the table they expect.
This is something we are hyper focused on. shoot me an email at [email protected] - you can also try our financial analysis template in our playground for free: https://app.midship.ai/demo.
Hi! In our playground we only included a few templates, but in our app you can create any template you'd like! So yes we can extract from academic papers! shoot me an email: [email protected]
This is an interesting use case! We've heard similar stories from people dealing with pensions. Today we are ready to solve out of the box the extract data from a factsheet into excel or CSV step. Shoot me an email at [email protected]!
We're excited for foundational models to improve because we hope it will unlock a lot more use cases. Things like analysis after extraction, able to accurately extract extremely complex documents, etc!
We saw initial traction with real estate firms extracting property data like rent rolls. But we've also seen traction in other verticals like accounting and intake forms. The original idea was very ambitious and when talking to potential customers they all seemed to be happy with the existing players.
+1 to what mitch said. We believe there is a large market for non-technical users who can now automate extraction tasks but do not know how to interact with apis. Midship is another option for them that requires 0 programming!
The reducto guys are great! Their benchmark is not exactly how we would index our product because we extract into a user specified template vs. extracting into markdown (wysiwyg). That being said their eval aligns with our internal findings of commercial OCR offerings.
Yes there is definitely a boom in document related startups. We see our niche as focusing on non technical users. We have focused on making it easy to build schemas, an audit and review experience, and integrating into downstream applications.
Hey there, was getting linker errors because panel.pc wasn't in Pkg-config. Turns out installing ncurses with homebrew gives you ncurses v6 which doesn't have .pc files.