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Tek 575 Mod Lit Redone
Wow -- thanks for doing all that work! It would be great to have that uploaded to tekwiki, as well.
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--Tom -- Prof. Thomas H. Lee Allen Ctr., Rm. 205 350 Jane Stanford Way Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-4070 On 10/30/2021 11:52, Liam Perkins wrote:
Acrobat 9.0 wouldn't open the 200 page page PDF posted a while back so I |
Liam Perkins
Someone with the password chops might go ahead and do that any time.
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Bill @ PEARL, Inc. On Sat, Oct 30, 2021 at 12:44 PM Tom Lee <tomlee@...> wrote:
Wow -- thanks for doing all that work! It would be great to have that |
How wonderful, it looks great!!! your time is greatly appreciated. Thank you.
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also very timely as i finally have a trace on my newly acquired 575, now to have time get the baby running correctly. ¸é±ð²Ô¨¦±ð On 10/30/21 11:52 AM, Liam Perkins wrote:
Acrobat 9.0 wouldn't open the 200 page page PDF posted a while back so I |
I've just uploaded it to Tekwiki now.
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Regards, Jared On Sun, Oct 31, 2021 at 06:31 AM, Liam Perkins wrote:
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Liam Perkins
Off list Brian asked:
Can you give any advice on a work methodology for doing a goodand I offered the following: Perhaps surprisingly, it's not that simple. I use Acrobat 9.0, an old 7.1 version of Photoshop and for page-at-a-time scanning an Epson "Perfection V600 Photo Scanner" as it's hi-res and the software has a great gamma control, which is crucial. Starting from scratch to build a new PDF: - scan 600dpi greyscale .tiff-s, nothing less will do, - open in Photoshop onto a preset 8.5 x 11 page, - Select All, right click and select "Free Transform" - use all those tools to resize, relocate rotate deskew etc, - use the Dust and Scratches tool set to 2 pixels to get rid of the almost inevitable pixelation and other small noise artifacts, - get used to the facts that this is a long learning curve and a slow process, - save the file, - do the rest of the files and select them all, - open Acrobat and select "Merge Files Into a Single PDF" - drag the selected files into the Acrobat window that just opened and hit whatever is the button that makes a PDF of your stuff, - Acrobat will eventually finish and ask you where to put your new PDF, do all that, - open the PDF, find the OCR tools and select "Clearscan OCR" let that run and it'll cut your file size to 1/10th or less, - open the now OCR-d PDF and select View Bookmarks, click on one of the page names then select all then hit the garbage can icon to ditch all the individual page names you don't want, - then set all the opening options, etc to make thing open the way you want it to, - and provided you didn't make any mistakes you're home and dry. To rework an existing PDF, open it in Acrobat then File >> Export >> Image >> Tiff >> Settings >> Conversion >>: Set 'Colorspace' to Grayscale or RGB and 'Resolution' to 600 pixels/inch and click 'OK'. Then,for convenience sake, assign a -short- filename, pick/create a destination folder and set 'Save as type' to 'TIFF', click 'Save' and let Acrobat run then go to the second step above and proceed. See the screenshot for my setup in Photoshop, noting that I've worked up quite a few 'Actions' that save a lot of time and tedium ======================== Repeat thru about 200 PDFs and you'll be pretty much up to speed. Long, slow pita is this business. Bill @ PEARL, Inc. |
Hi Bill,
Thanks for the info. I'd like to add that anyone still using Acrobat 9 today will have to be mindful of the numerous security problems in that product. It should not be used to open documents of unknown provenance. To my knowledge, it is still possible to install a current version of the Reader in parallel and set that as the default program to open PDFs (or a third party PDF reader if you prefer). I was also never happy with its OCR component for technical documents. I'm now using FineReader configured to additionally recognize Ohms, mu and similar symbols. |
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