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* Optimizing pdf with Acrobat 5
@ 2001-08-25 19:20 David Arnold
  2001-08-25 21:55 ` Hans Hagen
       [not found] ` <3.0.5.32.20010825155930.00874ec0@mail.northcoast.com>
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: David Arnold @ 2001-08-25 19:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
  Cc: dpstory

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All,

Here's an interesting problem I've just encountered. 

In the attached file, after "making" the pdf documents with make.bat, I
want to optimize the resulting pdf files before placing them on our web
site. In Acrobat 4, I would select File->Save As in Acrobat (not Distiller)
and I could click the Settings button to disable printing if I wished, etc.
The resulting file was "optimized" for byte-serving (page at a time) on our
web site.

Well, no longer. First of all, when I do File->Save As on
context-matrices-s.pdf (one of the pdf files that results from running
make.bat), the "Settings" button is greyed and unavailable. So, a little
journey into Acrobat 5's help files reveals:

Optimizing or creating Fast Web View files

You should convert your PDF files to Fast Web View PDF files—that is,
optimize them—
before distributing them.This minimizes file size and facilitates
page-at-a-time
downloading. In most cases, converting your PDF files to Fast Web View PDF
files by
optimizing them reduces their file size significantly.

Fast Web View also restructures a PDF document to prepare for page-at-a-time
downloading (byte-serving) from Web servers.With page-at-a-time
downloading, the
Web server sends only the requested page of information to the user, rather
than the
entire PDF document.This is especially important with large documents,
which can take a
long time to download from a server.

To find out if a PDF document has been converted to Fast Web View:

Choose File > Document Properties > Summary, and look at the Fast Web View
option.

To create a Fast Web View document:

1 Choose Edit > Preferences > General. Select Options in the left panel of
the General
Preferences dialog box. Select Save As Optimizes for Fast Web View (This
option is set by
default.) Click OK.

2 Use the File > Save As command to save your file.

Ok, I do this and save the file context-matrices-s.pdf as
context-matrices-s.pdf. Only difficulty, now none of my hyperlinks work.
Nada. It is no longer a navigable (is this a word?) document.

Yuk!

Any gurus out there that would care to comment? 

[-- Attachment #2: context-matrices.zip --]
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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

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-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2001-08-25 19:20 Optimizing pdf with Acrobat 5 David Arnold
2001-08-25 21:55 ` Hans Hagen
     [not found] ` <3.0.5.32.20010825155930.00874ec0@mail.northcoast.com>
2001-08-26 19:11   ` Hans Hagen

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