What you describe is indeed "old school" high volume printing - but that's the 
way of the past and you can see this as the industry (or at least those working 
with anything other than Black & White text-only content) is moving.

Certainly when the PDF needs to be converted to some other PDL (such as 
Postscript), the performance suffers - but when used with native PDF printers 
and RIPs the performance will exceed that of other formats and give you greater 
graphical richness.

IN fact, I am currently doing a final review on ISO 16612-2 - known as PDF/VT 
(PDF for Variable and Transactional Printing) which is specifically targeted at 
this market segment.

Leonard 

-----Original Message-----
From: Kevin Brown [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, November 10, 2009 3:24 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [iText-questions] Mission-critical pdf with thousands of statement 
of accounts / Design considerations to be verified by the experts

I would examine the fact that you intend on using PDF in a mission critical
application dealing with print. In my experience in the high-end print
market, with significant experience in insurance and statements, I have
never seen a customer desire PDF as the print format output for such an
application. Typically, large batch print runs are more suited for
Postscript, AFP or PPML where print vendors have optimized the
interpretation of the content of such files. These printers stage reusable
content in special ways, ripping them to memory and reusing these assets
while outputting pages. The key in such print applications is to drive the
printer at its highest speed and if the print stream is not optimized, it
will not happen. While some printers may also attempt to or have optimized
such things for PDF, it is much fewer than have done for these other more
widely used print formats.

Within the insurance industry, it would be much more common to have a
dual-batch processing model where statements are rendered simultaneously to
PDF for emailing/archiving and to Postscript or AFP for batch print.

Kevin Brown



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