Now this is example of why I hang with the list, overlooking the
bloviating discussion that seems to have overwhelmed the original
exchange of information.
I have rushed to my InDesign disc, to learn these features, many
thanks, Betty. Image quality was really fine with my voodoo
improvisation in Photoshop, but this promises to be even better. The
diacritical requirements are the háček, etc, of Czech and Slovak,
plus correspondence with Hungarian, Polish, Lithuanian accents
needed.
On the matter of battery life in mobil phones, you are dead-on:
overseas, my batteries last forever, here, they deplete rapidly.
Thanks for a cogent analysis of our sad-sack wireless situation
(fewer bars in more places).
Chad
Czech, Slovak, Hungarian, Polish, Lithuanian are all included in Mac
international keyboards. I think they need to be Unicode CE fonts
othewise all the diacriticals may not display. When you create a file
with InDesign, you need to be sure the language fonts are embedded. Use
TIFF for images in InDesign files. You don't need to insert images in
InDesign, only low res placeholders, but you have to be sure that the
links are good, otherwise the low-res images will be all you see.
Embedding the images will make a much larger file, but it will also
guarantee WYSIWYG for your output.
For PDF or other file that will be printed, colors should be CMYK. To
view only online or on the computer you can set your colors to RGB.
I like to see the little flags in the menu. Simple keyboard commands
change languages. Default is Command+Spacebar to change languages, but I
changed it to Option+Command+Spacebar, since it conflicts with Spotlight
and some Adobe commands.
Betty
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