Your first comment agrees with where I am at the moment hence the post.
I have worked through a few wills manually and have found it a strain on the eyes, a transcriber would be a great help.
I have searched through the free models and have not found one that accurately transcribes my 16th/17th English script.
If it is true that it is only capable of transcribing documents by the same person then it is of no use. If it is capable of transcribing any script written in "secretarial hand" then it would be useful. I want to be able to transcribe script from different people over about 100 years. If I have to teach a model to do part of that and then reteach it to do the rest I could live with that.
They are touting a super model as being the one to use but that costs money, I don't mind spending it if I know it will work.
I have looked at presentations on how to train the model and, frankly, they aren't written simply enough for my intellect but I would have a go.
There looks to be a couple of ways of doing it and I don't know which would be the best. It seems that you can feed it a script, use the most appropriate model, correct the answer and save it as approved. Alternatively you can feed it all your test pieces and the ranslated pages and set it off.
It could take me some time but I like mental challenges.
I have training data but I am not sure it meets the criterion for being identical.
So, the questions remains:
Is Transkribus worth persuing?
Can you actually train a model with the amount of credits you get for free?
Is the Super Model worth paying for or is it better, or even feasible, for me to do my own?