Reducing output resolution using pdflatex?

2006-05-10 Thread Peter Bowyer

Hi,

I have a LyX file designed for printing, with large image files 
etc.  The PDF created is over 3MB, and I would now like to make a 
72dpi version to publish online.  I can't find anything in the 
documentation about forcing resampling of the images, can anyone 
share how this is done?  It has to be pdflatex due to some packages I'm using.


Thanks,
Peter



Re: Reducing output resolution using pdflatex?

2006-05-10 Thread Paul A. Rubin

Peter Bowyer wrote:

Hi,

I have a LyX file designed for printing, with large image files etc.  
The PDF created is over 3MB, and I would now like to make a 72dpi 
version to publish online.  I can't find anything in the documentation 
about forcing resampling of the images, can anyone share how this is 
done?  It has to be pdflatex due to some packages I'm using.


Thanks,
Peter




I don't know how to do this in LyX, but if you're on Windows, you could 
install PDFCreator (http://sourceforge.net/projects/pdfcreator), which 
is a printer driver to generate PDF output, then print your document 
through it.  It has an option to change the print resolution.


/Paul




Re: Reducing output resolution using pdflatex?

2006-05-10 Thread Paul Smith

On 5/10/06, Paul A. Rubin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I have a LyX file designed for printing, with large image files etc.
 The PDF created is over 3MB, and I would now like to make a 72dpi
 version to publish online.  I can't find anything in the documentation
 about forcing resampling of the images, can anyone share how this is
 done?  It has to be pdflatex due to some packages I'm using.

I don't know how to do this in LyX, but if you're on Windows, you could
install PDFCreator (http://sourceforge.net/projects/pdfcreator), which
is a printer driver to generate PDF output, then print your document
through it.  It has an option to change the print resolution.


I have never used it, but Multivalent claims that it is able to
compress pdf files:

http://multivalent.sourceforge.net/

Paul


Reducing output resolution using pdflatex?

2006-05-10 Thread Peter Bowyer

Hi,

I have a LyX file designed for printing, with large image files 
etc.  The PDF created is over 3MB, and I would now like to make a 
72dpi version to publish online.  I can't find anything in the 
documentation about forcing resampling of the images, can anyone 
share how this is done?  It has to be pdflatex due to some packages I'm using.


Thanks,
Peter



Re: Reducing output resolution using pdflatex?

2006-05-10 Thread Paul A. Rubin

Peter Bowyer wrote:

Hi,

I have a LyX file designed for printing, with large image files etc.  
The PDF created is over 3MB, and I would now like to make a 72dpi 
version to publish online.  I can't find anything in the documentation 
about forcing resampling of the images, can anyone share how this is 
done?  It has to be pdflatex due to some packages I'm using.


Thanks,
Peter




I don't know how to do this in LyX, but if you're on Windows, you could 
install PDFCreator (http://sourceforge.net/projects/pdfcreator), which 
is a printer driver to generate PDF output, then print your document 
through it.  It has an option to change the print resolution.


/Paul




Re: Reducing output resolution using pdflatex?

2006-05-10 Thread Paul Smith

On 5/10/06, Paul A. Rubin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I have a LyX file designed for printing, with large image files etc.
 The PDF created is over 3MB, and I would now like to make a 72dpi
 version to publish online.  I can't find anything in the documentation
 about forcing resampling of the images, can anyone share how this is
 done?  It has to be pdflatex due to some packages I'm using.

I don't know how to do this in LyX, but if you're on Windows, you could
install PDFCreator (http://sourceforge.net/projects/pdfcreator), which
is a printer driver to generate PDF output, then print your document
through it.  It has an option to change the print resolution.


I have never used it, but Multivalent claims that it is able to
compress pdf files:

http://multivalent.sourceforge.net/

Paul


Reducing output resolution using pdflatex?

2006-05-10 Thread Peter Bowyer

Hi,

I have a LyX file designed for printing, with large image files 
etc.  The PDF created is over 3MB, and I would now like to make a 
72dpi version to publish online.  I can't find anything in the 
documentation about forcing resampling of the images, can anyone 
share how this is done?  It has to be pdflatex due to some packages I'm using.


Thanks,
Peter



Re: Reducing output resolution using pdflatex?

2006-05-10 Thread Paul A. Rubin

Peter Bowyer wrote:

Hi,

I have a LyX file designed for printing, with large image files etc.  
The PDF created is over 3MB, and I would now like to make a 72dpi 
version to publish online.  I can't find anything in the documentation 
about forcing resampling of the images, can anyone share how this is 
done?  It has to be pdflatex due to some packages I'm using.


Thanks,
Peter




I don't know how to do this in LyX, but if you're on Windows, you could 
install PDFCreator (http://sourceforge.net/projects/pdfcreator), which 
is a printer driver to generate PDF output, then print your document 
through it.  It has an option to change the print resolution.


/Paul




Re: Reducing output resolution using pdflatex?

2006-05-10 Thread Paul Smith

On 5/10/06, Paul A. Rubin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I have a LyX file designed for printing, with large image files etc.
> The PDF created is over 3MB, and I would now like to make a 72dpi
> version to publish online.  I can't find anything in the documentation
> about forcing resampling of the images, can anyone share how this is
> done?  It has to be pdflatex due to some packages I'm using.

I don't know how to do this in LyX, but if you're on Windows, you could
install PDFCreator (http://sourceforge.net/projects/pdfcreator), which
is a printer driver to generate PDF output, then print your document
through it.  It has an option to change the print resolution.


I have never used it, but Multivalent claims that it is able to
compress pdf files:

http://multivalent.sourceforge.net/

Paul