Online Plagiarism Tool Adds PDF Support

Online plagiarism detection service DOC Cop has expanded its offerings again, adding support for PDF files to its free document checking tools. This includes the ability to check PDF files against other PDFs or against Word documents.

DOC Cop is a Web-based service that provides free plagiarism detection tools, as well as paid document checks. It includes DOC Check, which evaluates individual documents--up to five at a time, 250,000 word maximum each--against one another; Corpus Check, which evaluates an unlimited number of documents (up to 12,000 words each) against one another; Web Check Free, which checks document segments against Web results for free, with a limited number of checks per day, no concurrent checks, and up to 150 words per submission; and Web Check Paid, which checks up to 2,000 words per submission with unlimited checks per day and allows concurrent submissions (AUS$5 per check).

The expanded PDF support is available for the free DOC Check and Corpus Check services. (PDF was already available through Web Check.) PDF files to be checked must contain text, rather than scanned images of text.

In addition to the expanded PDF support, both DOC Check and Corpus Check now support line breaks and "improved navigation for large documents," according to the company. More information is available at the link below.

Read More:

About the Author

David Nagel is the executive producer for 1105 Media's online K-12 and higher education publications and electronic newsletters. He can be reached at dnagel@1105media.com. He can now be followed on Twitter at http://twitter.com/THEJournalDave (K-12) or http://twitter.com/CampusTechDave (higher education).

Comments

Tue, Nov 10, 2009 Nabin London

Its good

Fri, Jan 23, 2009

Abstract—Agent technology has gained a huge amount of attention in the research community during the last few years. This new area of computing that has its roots in Software Engineering, Distributed Computing and Artificial Intelligence, has been used in a large number of commercial applications ranging from E-Commerce to defense applications. In order to facilitate the Agent based approach to software development, a large number of Agent frameworks like JATLite, JADE and Aglets etc. have been developed. With the increasing number of these frameworks, two parallel agent development standards have evolved: FIPA and MASIF. In this paper, we have done a thorough review of these two standards. We have found out that these two standards provide totally disjoint features. In addition, both of the standards lack many of the features required for the realization of a true multiagent society. We have highlighted the features missing in both of the standards and proposed suggestions on how these features can be implemented. We have proposed the need for a new Agent standard that may address the requirements we have pointed out in the survey.

Add your Comment

Your Name:(optional)
Your Email:(optional)
Your Location:(optional)
Comment:
Please type the letters/numbers you see above