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A great, yet cryptic, philosopher king once
said: "To know PDF is to know the universe." Is
this true, you expectantly ask? Is this really
true? Well no, sadly it is not. But don't be
disheartened, for the truth about PDF is of far
more practical value (albeit far less
philosophical value). In truth, to know PDF is
to know a dynamic and versatile file format that
can dramatically simplify and expedite document
viewing, integration, and printing. So while it
might not bring epiphany, PDF can most certainly
bring efficiency.
And now we get to the
"knowing" part. First off, the letters P, D, and
F compose a file extension-one of those
three-letter codes that appear at the end of
file names (like know_pdf_story.pdf). This
extension is like a little file recipe; it
describes the file ingredients and tells your
operating system how to prepare it for
(electronic) consumption. Like most file
extensions, PDF is also an acronym: short for
Adobe Portable Document Format. Adobe PDF is
widely used by publishers, web writers, graphic
designers, and everyday laypersons; and is
generally accepted as the preeminent format for
universal document exchange. But why is PDF so
popular? PDF's popularity and power originate
from its five key attributes:
Compatible:
PDF is a cross-platform file format. This means
that PDF can be used to recreate documents
irrespective of where they were originally
created. Also, PDF will preserve the document's
original style and formatting (including color,
font, and imagery) exactly as they were intended
to be seen. With Adobe Acrobat Reader, virtually
anyone, on any computer, with any platform,
running any application version, can recognize,
read, and print identical PDF files. Anyone. You
included.
Active: PDF files are highly
navigable-this means you can sail around
documents like a mini-Magellan. PDF files
contain highly useful navigation tools like:
internal and external links, structured
bookmarks, search capabilities, thumbnail page
views, multi-directional buttons, magnification
options, and more.
Accurate: PDF files
are both ultra-printable and ultra-viewable. PDF
utilizes the PostScript language-imaging
model-you know about the PostScript imaging
model, right? No? Good. It would scare me if you
did. Just remember that PDF ensures true,
faithful, and crisp printing-the kind of
printing you like. Also, PDF files viewed
on-screen retain precise color regardless of
software or hardware variation, and also retain
precise clarity in magnifications upward of
500%.
Convenient: PDF files are both
smaller in size than original source files (e.g.
potentially 20% as large as HTML files) and
easier to download and view. PDF documents also
offer page-at-a-time downloading; allowing you
to read and revise the early pages of a document
before the entirety has been received. Further,
because of their economical size, you'll
download the whole document quicker than you
would a source file anyway. Because of these
convenient characteristics, PDF files are often
referred to as 7-11 files. Not really, though.
Someone might laugh at you if you called them
7-11 files.
Secure: PDF offers extensive
security protections. Users can assign security
passwords to PDF documents before sending them
to maintain strict control over sensitive
information. Further, PDF files can be
authenticated and secured with digital signature
technology. A PDF feature known as SelfSign
enables creators and users to restrict and track
access to critical documents through the use of
an encoded digital signature. This feature also
enables users to say cool things like, "Sorry,
Glen. It seems you're not authorized to view
this material."
Enough already, you say,
I accept that PDF is divinely inspired. Clearly,
the multiple benefits of PDF have now been
sufficiently revealed. But we've been talking
about PDF files in the prime of their
lives-where, you might ask, do new PDF files
come from? Well, Timmy, it's complicated. When
two computer applications love each other very
much.oops, different question. Actually, there
are five primary methods for creating PDF files.
1. Adobe Acrobat: main Adobe software
for the creation and modification of PDF files.
Allows users to create a PDF file by simply
dropping-and-dragging a document into Acrobat,
choosing the format directly from Microsoft
Office, or converting scanned or web documents
directly, among other methods.
2. Adobe
PDF Writer: software that mimics a printer
driver to create PDF documents from nearly any
Windows application.
3. Adobe Acrobat
Distiller: software for workgroup-oriented,
automated high-volume conversion of PostScript
files to PDF.
4. Adobe Acrobat Capture:
software designed specifically for the
conversion of scanned image files to
PDF-optimized for character recognition and
clean-up.
5. Other software: other Adobe
graphical and publishing software such as
FrameMaker, PageMaker, and Illustrator can be
used to automatically create PDF files. Also, a
surplus of third party software like EZ-PDF,
ActivePDF Printer, and even QuarkXPress offer
PDF creation
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