Title: Message
How many pages is this beast? What program was the original done in? Does the client have access to a native file?
 
Rich Sprague
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, August 04, 2003 2:36 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [PDF-Basics] mixed graphics

Try importing the scan into Adobe Photoshop, make any adjustments, and then export to PDF.  If you don't have Photoshop, use the native software with your scanner and either use Distiller or save as a grayscale or color .TIFF.  Then drag and drop the image from Explorer to Acrobat.
-----Original Message-----
From: chris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, August 04, 2003 3:32 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PDF-Basics] mixed graphics

Hello,
 
I have a client who wants an abstract of a research paper to be scanned and converted into a PDF for posting online.
They have not had success with producing the quality document they need in-house. Kinkos' scanners were not much better for this, plus their Acrobat program choked on the task. Now, a commercial document conversion and storage company tells me there is no way that Acrobat can produce a quality reproduction with figures, graphs, 2-column text and footnotes from a scanned import.
If Acrobat and scanners cannot do the job, what is the alternative that most Acrobat users go to next?
 
Thanks,
Christine
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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