Another option is to scan the pages as bitmap (bmp) files. They *seem* to be very large, but if you then compress them using Zip or RAR, the files become rather small. Prior to compression, I typically reduce the color depth to 2 bits, and if you do not need image detail for schematics or the like, this will shrink the file size down as well. PLay around with the DPI setting to find something that works. 300, as Matt mentioned is nice, but 150 will also work in some cases. Not as easy to look at as pdf documents, but you get a smaller file size. tm Matthew Rossiter wrote:
I've been using Acrobat 5.0.
My preference is:
Image Type: Line Art Destination: OCR Resolution: 300 DPI
If you want a smaller file size then maybe 200 dpi. I think 300 gives you a pretty good reproduction of the original and isn't that much bigger.
You definitely do not want to select "Black and White Photo" as an option. That's when things get mega-huge.
Matt
-----Original Message----- From: owner-techtoolslist@www.flippers.com [mailto:owner-techtoolslist@www.flippers.com]On Behalf Of John Robertson Sent: Thursday, May 16, 2002 11:27 AM To: TechToolsList@flippers.com Subject: Compressing/Page Capturing PDFs
Anyone here play with Adobe 5.0? Does it do a better job of capturing pages than 4.0?
The reason I ask is I was looking at the amount of storage used, so far, on the FTP site, and had recently received a rather small PDF that was scanned manual for the Arium ML4100 (it's up there) that was only 260K in size, whereas my scans were coming in the multimeg size.... So I played with a recent file that Kev put up today - the 80188PODGS manual, and Kev's version was 1.2megs, whereas the Captured manual was only 56K. Slight space advantage...
John :-#)#