Cannot convert {PRINT "[/DEST/destination /DEST pdfmark"\*MERGEFORMAT} from Word 2007 to bookmark

Hi,
Please help, We used to have word 2003 and we have below formula for bookmark so that when we convert it, there's bookmark in pdf. However, when we migrated to Word 2007, it stops working. When I am doing merge files into a single pdf, what I get for bookmark is the document title. Is there a compatibility issue? Or what is really the problem? Can you help me? Btw, I'm using Adobe Acrobat 9 Pro. Thank you in advance.
  "\*MERGEFORMAT}
{PRINT "[/DEST/destination /DEST pdfmark

A: Cannot convert {PRINT "[/DEST/destination /DEST pdfmark"\*MERGEFORMAT} from Word 2007 to bookmark

Are you using the Adobe PDF printer to produce a .ps or .prn file first and then using Distiller to produce the PDF.  I have found that Distiller recognizes and renders the /DEST pdfmark operators it encounters in Word 2010 .docx file.  It has also been my experience that when I build a book PDF from multiple PDFs, I must insert the pages from each file.  In that way, the named destinations are given the correct page in the book PDF file.  I learned that using automatic merge prevented links to named destinations from working. I think the reason is that if you use the automatic merge, the named destinations retain the page of the original PDF file, and therefore, links to them do not work. 
Hope that helps

Similar Messages

  • RFC Function Error: Cannot convert a value of 'MM/DD/YYYY' from type java.l

    hi experts,
    iam calling an RFC using SAP_JCO_Function. one of the input parameters is date which shud be in the format 'MM/DD/YYYY' but when i create a transaction property of data type DATETIME the format changes to " 2007-06-21 14:31:50 ". to refrain form passing this value at run time i have defined the transaction property as string and defaulted the value to MM/DD/YYYY.
    When i execute the RFC i get the error "Cannot convert a value of 'MM/DD/YYYY' from type java.l".
    Issue is with time field as well. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
    Thanks,
    Avinash

    Hi
    You can use datefromxmlformat( datetime, toformat ) .
    in toformat you give: "MM/dd/yyyy" and in datetime you pass your xml format date like: 2007-06-21 T14:31:50.
    Try like this. Hope this may help you.
    Thanks

  • I recently signed up for a one month trial of adobe pro.  I logged in.  I cannot convert a single page of PDF file to word or Excel with this trial.  I just get the request to sign up for a year.  What good is the trial if I can't try it?

    I recently signed up for a one month trial of adobe pro.  I logged in.  I cannot convert a single page of PDF file to word or Excel with this trial.  I just get the request to sign up for a year.  What good is the trial if I can't try it?

    Hey vcomfort6,
    Please ensure that you are using Adobe Acrobat and not Reader to convert PDF file to word or excel.
    Could you tell me whether it is a scanned document? Does this happen with all PDFs or any specific one?
    Do you get any error message? What exactly happens when you try doing the same?
    Hope to hear from you.
    Regards,
    Anubha

  • Bug? Accessibility Tags Converting from Word 2007

    This seems like a minor issue, but it's one that could create a lot of frustration for a disabled person using a screenreader to read tabular data in a PDF.
    As you know, Acrobat plays nicely with Office apps allowing users to create tagged (structured), accessible PDF documents from MS Office files. I just created a simple docx file with a table (attached), and when I converted it to PDF, I noticed a difference in the tags it creates compared to conversion from Word XP. As you see in the Word file, the table is very basic, except that one of its column headers is split into two cells. This is actually a very common technique for presenting table data. In order to automatically tag the header rows as table header cells <TH> in the PDF, I set the first two rows to "Repeat Header Rows."
    Converting from Word 2007 with the "Save as Adobe PDF," or any other method that uses the Acrobat plugin, creates a tag tree that is missing a <TH> tag. I found the problem when I was testing a file with JAWS screenreading software. Using the JAWS "current cell" command (Ctrl-Alt-Numpad 5) to announce the column headers. It reads the wrong header for the current cell due to the missing <TH>. So, in my example file, it announces $2 and $5 as 2010 amounts rather than 2009. That could be pretty confusing to a screen reading user, to say the least.
    I then compared the result to the new Word 2007 "Save as PDF or XPS" feature. That feature tagged the file properly and the header columns match up.
    Compare the attached "save-as-adobe-pdf.gif" to"save-as-pdf-xps.gif". Note the empty (but necessary) <TH> tag in the latter image.
    Just as a sanity check I had a coworker with Word XP convert the file. Those tags were correct too. So, this must be a problem between Acrobat and Word 2007.
    Anyone have other observations on this? I'm going to be leading some accessibility training and right now, it looks like using the Word 2007 conversion feature is the way to go.
    I'm using Acrobat 9 Pro.
    Thanks,
    Joe

    Hi Joe,
    I sense your frustration. For any organization that has to or wants to engage in providing accessible online information
    a serious logistics support issue raises its head. To do PDF, HTML, whatever the proper way (and it can be done)
    requires more resources (training, knowledge, hardware, software, changes to work flows, perhaps some more staff).
    The is no "work smarter with less & pump out more" in this venue.
    Yes, it is helpful (and necessary) to "be one" with the S508 "paragraphs" - WCAG 1.0 - WCAG 20.
    However, once anyone begins to provide PDFs that must be "accessible" the first, single most important reference is ISO 32000.
    The Adobe PDF References that preceded PDF becoming an ISO Standard are useful; but, ISO 32000 is the standard.
    In this documentation there is full discussion of what *must* be done to provide an accessible PDF.
    Without a firm understanding of this content, other information tends to bring about a defused opacity of focus which can
    contribute to major conceptual errors vis-a-vis accessible PDF.
    Leonard Rosenthol's AUC blog entry provides a link to the ISO permitted Adobe version (free) of ISO 32000-1.
    http://www.acrobatusers.com/blogs/leonardr/adobe-posts-free-iso-32000
    Additional, useful information is found in these two documents:
    (1) - PDF Accessibility API Reference (from the Acrobat SDK)
    https://acrobat.com/#d=J7bWW4LvNoznh8fHCsfZDg
    (2) - Reading PDF Files Through MSAA
    https://acrobat.com/#d=uIOvkVTP74kag3bXFJLIeg
    About JAWS - Yes, much used. However, not the exlusively used AT application.
    If I use Windows Eyes, NVDA, a braille reader, or something else then what?
    JAWS *does not* define "it is accessible"...
    re: (1)
    "Game away and if it ...."
       Consider "Stop before right on red".
       "Compliance" is Stop on Red - Turn Right
       "Intent" (aka usability) is Stop on Red -  Look Good for on coming traffic that has the right of way - Yield - when clear, turn right.
    But, at least we are not talking about "left on red" 8^)
    re: (2)
    Just an observation. A defective product that claims to be "whole" can get entities (individuals/businesses) into a sticky wicket.
    Putting a high volume of defective products on one's selves only increases the probability that one gets 'busted'.
    Quantity replacing Quality just is not a success precursor.
    Case in point - Target and the national class action legal action that was taken against it with regards to "accessibility" of online information/services.
    Resolved now - see NFB's web site.
    re: (3)
    Ah, but what would Judge Judy or Judge Marily say?
    Efficiency does not preclude providing a "whole" product.
    I doubt that there will ever be a seamless "one-click" between products of any of the dominant software houses.
    They are intense competitors. That this is the case does not abrogate others from providing a "whole" product, no?
    So, if the organization wants the "we do accessible PDF" label then it pays the freight - Adobe Pro, training, appropriate work flows, etc
    that permit delivery of PDFs that meet the standards for what a well formed tagged output PDF is (accessible is a sub-set of this).
    For PDF there is no other way.
    If this cannot be done then there is always HTML as an acceptable method (to some it is the preferred and only "true" way).
    However, HTML, done "right" for accessiblilty is just as demanding in its own way.
    With each AT version / dot version release, JAWS - Windows Eyes - NVDA & others hone in closer on utilizing PDF ISO Standard 32000.
    That means if you deploy "accessible" PDF you need to provide PDF that live to the ISO standard.
    Keep in mind that S508's paragraphs began when, effectively, HTML was "it". In software terms that was geologic eons ago.
    For contemporary AT to effectively parse PDF, the PDF must be a well formed Tagged PDF having a format/layout that reflects a logical hierarchy.
    Creation of all this must start in the authoring environment with the content author.
    The post-process PDF output then assures that the PDF elements (tags) are the correct type, have the requisite attributes, etc.
    Without this, AT will not be able to provide the end-user effect utilization of the PDF.
    So, for AT to properly 'work' the PDF, <TH> elements *must* have the Scope attribute's value defined, Row and Column Span values defined, etc.
    Scope, Row Span, Column Span, Table IDs and Headings must be added as part of the post-processing of a PDF using Acrobat Professional.
    An alternative is the Netcentric CommonLook plug-in for Acrobat Professional. What it does, Acrobat Pro can do; however, the CommonLook
    provides a robust user interface. Downside: at some $1k per seat it is not 'cheap' and it has a *steep* learning curve (Sitka Pass?).
    Two table related resources are at this AUC thread (in post 3 and 4). They may be of some usefulness.
    http://www.acrobatusers.com/forums/aucbb/viewtopic.php?id=23178
    When the "smelly stuff" gets feed into the maw of the fan it's prudent to not be directly down stream, eh.
    Consider Target and the situation they put themselves in.
    Consider submittal of accessible PDF to fedgov or stategov agencies.
    They won't be in front of the fan if usability of the PDFs becomes an issue.
    Rather, it will be those submitting. After all the agency did say "accessible".
    Better to slow down and do it right or ramp up resource loading to support "schedule" than to stake oneself out as someones "feed" tomorrow, no?
    In the final analysis, for PDF, HTML, or any 'format',  Accessibility is the Usability + Compliance.
    Does it take improvements in professional development/training, adequate hardware/software, *time*?
    Yes. But, it all comes down to "where the rubber hits the road" - what tires are you on?
    It can be done. I do it one small step at a time every day. Often, that's what it takes.
    Deliverables are provided; but, with no mis-labeling and the incremental progress is identified, celebrated and the whole thing continues until
    the "road" is completed properly.
    Don't want wash outs, bridge collapse or what not tomorrow <g>.
    (But then I'm a fan of "Holmes on Homes" which may go a long way towards understanding my point of view when it comes to accessible PDF.)
    re: function(){Return ....
    Good question.
    My guess - either from the cut & paste I initially performed from the application I'd been using to assemble write up and screenshots or something associated with the Adobe Forum application.
    It can't be that I'm 'special'; if that was the case one of my occassional lotto quick picks would have been a big $ winner long ago <G>.
    fwiw -
    You'll find a number of "Accessible PDF" related resources in the threads at the AUC Accessibility Forum.
    http://www.acrobatusers.com/forums/aucbb/viewforum.php?id=18
    Two Accessible PDF related on demand eSeminars are also available.
    Look for Duff Johnson's and Charlie Pike's (on page 2) eSeminars.
    http://www.acrobatusers.com/learning_center/eseminars_on_demand
    Be well...

  • Convert from Word 2007 to Acrobat Pro 9; bookmark issue

    When converting from Word 2007 to PDF using Acrobat Pro 9, enabling "Convert Word Headings to Bookmarks", not only are Headings converted to bookmarks, but bulleted text (styles), as well.  I attached the subsequent PDF, but this forum does not permit the document attachment.  I really only want to show the Headings.  (It may be noteworthy to mention that when using this same set of styles in Word 2003 and Acrobat Pro7 the conversion was seamless.)
    Does anyone know how to correct this?  I have reviewed my Word styles and the issue does not appear to be on the document level.  Am I missing some obscure setting?
    I'd appreciate any help.
    Thanks.
    -PS

    I had a similar situation occur when converting Word 2007 docs to Acrobat Pro 9 Extended via the PDFMaker (Acrobat add-on tab in Word 2007), and I want to share a workaround. In summary, I had extraneous bookmarks appear in the PDF (heading 3s, body text, XE Index tags, etc.)  that I did not select to be in the PDF.  I contacted Adobe's support and ended up talking for approx. 2.5 hrs to 2 different reps with no solution. They reproduced the issue on their end, but couldn't figure out how to fix this. I recently upgraded to Tech Comm Suite 2.5 from 1.0. The Word 2007 conversion to PDF via Acrobat Pro 8.x worked fine.
    Scenario: I have 400-page user guides that I am required to publish as 'Press Quality' with navigable bookmarks to certain headings in the PDF. I have to generate the PDF via the Acrobat Add-On tab in Word, since I do not want to manually insert bookmarks in the PDF for 400 page documents (as you would when using the Adobe Print driver or 'Save As PDF' operation).
    In the Adobe PDF Maker dialog, I have the following Application Settings selected in the General tab:
    Create Bookmarks
    Add Links
    In the Bookmarks tab,  I originally had only two Elements selected for bookmarks:
    Heading 1 (a Word Heading already present) as the Level 1 Bookmark.
    Table of Contents Bookmark (a Word Style I created) as the Level 2 Bookmark.
    As a result, the Convert Word Headings to Bookmarks and Convert Styles to Bookmarks were both enabled in the Bookmarks tab.
    The resulting PDF contained extraneous bookmarks that I did NOT select, such as Heading 2s, 3s, even body text - too much to clean up for 400-page documents! Additionally, and this was annoying too - I noticed that all bookmarks appeared as Level 1 Bookmarks, making the PDF Bookmarks really messy. I converted multiple Word 2007 documents with the same results.
    How I resolved the issue:
    In the Word 2007 document, open the Styles window, select all instances of the specific Word Heading (in my case, Heading 1). All instances of the selected Word Heading will be selected in the doc.
    Click the New Style icon in the lower left part of the Styles window.
    In the Create New Style from Formatting dialog, create a new style name (e.g., I created H1).
    Just to be sure to NOT create the new style from an existing Word Heading, I selected (no style) in the Style Based On field.
    Configure the remaining formatting items as necessary, and then click OK. All of the selected instances from the old Word Heading style are now changed to the new style created (in my case, H1).
    Click the Preferences tab in the Acrobat add-on tab in Word 2007, and open the Bookmarks tab.
    Remove the old Word Heading (in my case, it was Heading 1) so it no longer will be included as a Bookmark in the PDF.
    Select the new Word Style that you created (in my case, H1) to be generated as the Level 2 bookmark. Note: My original Level 1 bookmark, "TOC Bookmark," is still selected. Now, only the Convert Word Styles to Bookmarks is enabled in the Bookmarks tab.
    Generate the PDF once again via the PDFMaker, and no extraneous bookmarks appear in the PDF.
    Note: I also noticed that when Index tags (XE tags) were present in an element selected to be a bookmark in the PDF (such as my new style, H1), they also appeared in the PDF Bookmarks pane. I just moved the XE tags down to the body text so they would no longer appear in the PDF.
    Question for discussion: Maybe there is a bug in the PDFMaker when both Convert Word Headings to Bookmarks and Convert Styles to Bookmarks are selected? The extraneous bookmarks do not appear in my PDF when only Convert Word Styles is selected.

  • Prints wrong colour from Word 2007. O.P. XP

    Printing from word 2007 with Black text, is printed in Cyan?  Have Repaired Word ,cleaned the Registrey and updated HP driver, but not corrected the fault?  Any ideas?
    This question was solved.
    View Solution.

    You didn't mention what printer model you have, but in the meantime, try this.  If this does not solve your problem, please let me know and add your printer model so I can do a more thorough search for a resolution. 
    Tobindo
    An HP Representative
    HP PSC 1100, 1200, or Officejet 4100 Series Not Printing Correctly  (See this link for full instructions with diagrams, plus other solutions to try.  The following instructions were taken from this document.
    The colors are incorrect
    This normally occurs because one of the ink cartridges are low on one or more colors of ink, do the following to determine if the ink cartridge is out of ink.
    Check the estimated ink levels in the Printer Toolbox. If the all-in-one software is not installed, skip to Step 2.
    NOTE: The estimated ink levels are calibrated for the HP 56 and HP 57 ink cartridges. The estimated ink level will be incorrect for the HP 28 ink cartridge.
    In the HP Director software, click Settings , click Print Settings , and then click Printer Toolbox .
    In the Printer Toolbox, select the Estimated Ink Level tab as is shown in Figure 1. Remember that this is an estimated ink level based on counting the drops of ink used and that it may not reflect the actual amount of ink remaining. If one or more of the colors of ink are low or empty, replace the ink cartridge.
    Figure 1: The Estimated Ink Level tab of the Printer Toolbox
    Print a test page by one of the following methods:
    From the Printer Toolbox: Select the Device Services tab of the Toolbox and then click Print a Test Page . The test page marked A in Figure 2 will print.
    From the all-in-one front panel: Press and hold the Cancel button, and then press the Color Start Copy button. The test page marked B in Figure 2 will print.
    Figure 2: Self test pages - A is from the Printer Toolbox, B is from the front panel
    If the colors on the test page look correct and are not faded or light, continue troubleshooting with Step 4 below. If the colors on the test page do not look correct or are faded or missing, clean the ink cartridges as detailed in the "Cleaning the ink cartridges " section below. Replace the ink cartridge if the correct colors do not print after cleaning the ink cartridge.
    Assign a color management profile to the all-in-one. To do this, refer to the following:
    Click Start , click Settings , and then click Printers (in Windows XP, click Start , and then click Printers and Faxes ) to open the Printers folder.
    In the Printers folder, right-click the HP all-in-one printer icon and then click Properties .
    Click the Color Management tab.
    Click Add to see the list of available color profiles.
    In the Add Profile Association dialog box, select Diamond Compatible 9300k G2.2.icm .
    Click Add and then click OK . Print the file again. If the application does not print in color, use Microsoft Paint to print a document with colors.
    Try printing again and see if the colors are better.
    When printing on some photo papers, there can be a greenish cast to blacks when photo paper is the selected paper type. Change the Paper Type setting to HP Bright White paper or Plain paper and print the page again.

  • Tiny U's when converting from Word 2007 to Acrobat 9

    When converting a MS Word document that has an underlined word in it, the PDF has very small capital U's before and after the underlining. This is when going from Word 2007 on Vista to Acrobat 9 (CS4). Anyone else experience this?

    Here's how I can duplicate this.
    1 - Open a new document or an existing document
    2 - Underline any word using either the Ctrl-U keystroke or by use of the ribbon bar option (Word 2007). By the way, this occurs only in Word, works well in PowerPoint.
    3 - Save document either as .docx or .doc
    4 - Convert to PDF by selecting the Acrobat ribbon and clicking on Create PDF.
    5 - View PDF, zoom to approximately 800% to see the very small capital U's
    It should also be noted that if the "Enable Accessibility and Reflow with tagged Adobe PDF" is unchecked, this issue goes away. However, this is absolutely not a viable option because all of my documents must be accessible for persons with disabilities. Furthermore, in theory I should/could be able to create the PDF from Word without the tags and use Acrobat's "Add tags to document" feature, but Acrobat doesn't handle complex documents well, or as well as creating the tags directly from Word.
    To see an example see this:
    www.humtech.com/upload/test.doc
    www.humtech.com/upload/test.pdf

  • How to make images searchable (OCR) when printing from Word 2007 to PDF with Acrobat 10

    Good Day, I have checked several forums and the help file, but I can't seem to get a straight answer on this issue. 
    Our office creates many documents in Microsoft Word 2007 that contain both typed text AND images.  For example, I have a document with a summary section and then a .jpg of an event from Facebook.  We usually Print the document using Adobe PDF and the resulting PDF is searchable with the Find tool.  The problem is that the images contain text and we want that to be searchable as well.  I found posts saying to take the PDF and Print it again as an image and then run the Recognize Text tool.  I have tried this and it does indeed work, although the resulting PDF is grainy looking (even at 600 dpi).
    What I would like to know is if there is a way to get the images to be searchable during the conversion from Word to PDF. I could educate my co-workers on how to do this and save the trouble of having to touch each document more than once. Also, I do not like the graininess of the image nor the extra steps involved to convert each document.  It will require a lot more hands on maintenance than I have time for.
    Any assistance or clues you can provide on this topic would be appreciated.  Thank you in advance, Paula C.

    Thanks so much for your reply.
    Paula F. Cutrone
    Lead Crime Analyst
    Onondaga Crime Analysis Center
    511 S. State Street, Room 205
    Syracuse, NY 13202
    tel (315) 442-5645 x5062
    fax (315) 442-5646
    ***CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE***
    Information contained in this e-mail is confidential and may be privileged and exempt from disclosure.  If the reader of this message is not the intended recipient, the reader is hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution, or copying is strictly prohibited. All information contained within should be considered law enforcement sensitive unless otherwise noted. If the reader has received this in error, please immediately destroy all copies and attachments and notify this office by replying to this e-mail or by calling (315) 442-5645.

  • Printing a PDF from Word 2007

    Good Day, I have checked several forums and the help file, but I can't seem to get a straight answer on this issue. 
    Our office creates many documents in Microsoft Word 2007 that contain both typed text AND images.  For example, I have a document with a summary section and then a .jpg of an event from Facebook.  We usually Print the document using Adobe PDF and the resulting PDF is searchable with the Find tool.  The problem is that the images contain text and we want that to be searchable as well.  I found posts saying to take the PDF and Print it again as an image and then run the Recognize Text tool.  I have tried this and it does indeed work, although the resulting PDF is grainy looking (even at 600 dpi).
    What I would like to know is if there is a way to get the images to be searchable during the conversion from Word to PDF. I could educate my co-workers on how to do this and save the trouble of having to touch each document more than once. Also, I do not like the graininess of the image nor the extra steps involved to convert each document.  It will require a lot more hands on maintenance than I have time for.  We are on Windows 7.
    Any assistance or clues you can provide on this topic would be appreciated.  Thank you in advance, Paula C.

    Any work to make the images searchable should be done BEFORE putting them in Word. It is far too late once the PDF is made because you will destroy the good work that Word did in preparing the PDF in the first place.
    Sadly it's far from clear how you'd do that. About the only format you could use to hold OCRd images would be EPS, and I've never heard of "OCR to EPS" software.

  • Converting from Word 2007 to PDF (Acrobat 8.0) footers formatting problems

    As the title describes, when I convert to pdf the text in my footers is changed.  In Word, the footer simply has a link back to the bookmarks.  The text is as so:
    Click here go to back to the Table of Contents (with the Table of Contents text the actual link)
    When I  go ahead and convert to PDF, the font color is changed and only a couple words are underlined.  In addition the last four words get placed three lines below the other words.
    Any ideas on fixing this?  I have not yet patched due to not have admin priv, but am working with our IT guy to update.

    Be sure that WORD gets patched too. Often these problems turn out to be OFFICE issues. You might try a sample print to paper to see the issue. Also, AA is at 8.1.6.
    There have been several problems folks have had with WORD 2007. The updates help some, but it is almost as though MS put some hooks in WORD 2007 to cross up Acrobat in some cases. I have run PPT documents with earlier versions of WORD and Acrobat with no problem. WORD 2007 would produce a totally different result that was not expected. There are even differences in graphics that you put in a DOC file versus a DOCX file. The latter seems to be doing some strange things to graphics. I would tell you more, but I really try to stay away from WORD unless I need it for compatibility with others.

  • "Convert to PDF" shortcut is missing in Microsoft Word 2007

    Hi
    I have just updated from Microsoft Word 2003 to Word 2007. I have always had a shortcut in Word 2003 in the toolbar with "Convert to PDF". After I have upgraded to Word 2007 I cannot get the shortcut to appear in the Word toolbar.
    Does anyone know how I can get the shortcut back?
    /James

    Version 8.1 or later are the only versions that will work with MS Office 2007. You will also have to install or repair Acrobat after installing MS Office and enable the Acrobat macros through the "About Word" panel.

  • Exchange active sync cannot connect to server after migration mailbox user from exchange 2007 to exchange 2013 coexistence

    Hello, everyone, my name is rafl
    I have a problem with exchange 2013 active sync.
    I have installed exchange 2013 coexistence with legacy exchange 2007, I have to migrate user mailboxes: [email protected] from exchange 2007 to exchange 2013.
    but any problem with active sync connection on the mobile device after moving mailbox user. I reconfigure the exchange ActiveSync external connection domain (latest.domain.com) on mobile device replacing legacy exchange ActiveSync external connection domain
    (legacy.domain.com)
    the process of moving mailboxes successfully without error.
    Access OWA for exchange 2007 and exchange 2013 is running normally
    access mail from Outlook running normally
    Certificate request has been installed and has no problem with it
    The OWA virtual directory is configured for internal and external connections and different from the legacy exchange
    The autodiscover virtual directory is configured for internal and external connections and different from the legacy exchange
    ActiveSync virtual directory is configured for internal and external connections and different from the legacy exchange
    user mailboxes are still on exchange 2007 is not problematic.
    only problem with Exchange Active Sync on mobile devices, where I set up an email with android, iphone, windows phone. the error message: cannot connect to the server.
    but, if I create a new user and create user mailboxes directly in exchange server 2013, ActiveSync can run without error on mobile device, access through OWA, MsOutlook, Outlook Anywhere also run normally.
    only the results of user migration from exchange 2007 to exchange 2013 which is troubled with exchange ActiveSync connection.
    any ideas for this problem, and what should I check on the exchange server ..?

    i have run the activesync test connectivity and get some error :
    Testing TCP port 443 on host domain.co.id to ensure it's listening and open.
    The specified port is either blocked, not listening, or not producing the expected response.
    A network error occurred while communicating with the remote host.
    Elapsed Time: 3091 ms.
    Testing TCP port 443 on host autodiscover.domain.co.id to ensure it's listening and open.
    The specified port is either blocked, not listening, or not producing the expected response.
    A network error occurred while communicating with the remote host.
    Elapsed Time: 21072 ms.
    Testing TCP port 80 on host autodiscover.domain.co.id to ensure it's listening and open.
    The specified port is either blocked, not listening, or not producing the expected response.
    A network error occurred while communicating with the remote host.
    Elapsed Time: 21049 ms.
    I have allowed access to port 443 (https) and 80 (http) on the firewall and re-run testconnectivity, but still with the same results. if I enable active sync for users who created directly in Exch 2013 there is no problem with the ActiveSync, just a problem
    for users who moved from Exch 2007 to Exch 2013. @Android, iPhone, and Blackberry the error message "cannot connect to the server"

  • Acrobat 9 Pro - Will it print to pdf with embedded pdf's from Word 2007?

    Hello All,
    We're considering upgrading to Acrobat 9 Pro or Extended.  One of our concerns is whether it will handle the following:
    1. We create very large documents and we like the ability to use OLE of existing PDF documents imbedded into Word 2007 which causes a new PDF window  to open up from the imbedded PDF.  It also displays nicely as an icon or the cover page within Word.
    2. The challenge is when printing (distilling) that master document with any imbedded PDFs, the icon or cover page is displayed, but the OLE feature goes away and does not recognize the imbedded PDF any longer; Acrobat simply treats the imbedded PDF in Word as any other page in the distilling process.
    3. We're not wild about bookmarking or linking to another PDF.
    Does Acrobat 9 Pro or Extended resolve this issue?

    The options availible for scripted print settings are all shown in the entry for "PrintParams" object in the Acrobat JavaScript Reference.  Have you looked to see if these options fit your needs?  If they do, and if the script can detect which PDF requires which options, then  you're in business.  But if the options you need are not there, then your only option is to set the batch process to display the print dialog for every PDF.
    Thom Parker
    The source for PDF Scripting Info
    pdfscripting.com
    The Acrobat JavaScript Reference, Use it Early and Often
    http://www.adobe.com/devnet/acrobat/javascript.html
    Then most important JavaScript Development tool in Acrobat
    The Console Window (Video tutorial)
    The Console Window(article)

  • I just installed Adobe CreatePDF desktop printer, when I try to use from Word or Excel, it does not work.  The Adobe print queue says "error" in the status screen.  I have uninstalled and re-installed.  Any ideas of what to do next?

    I just installed Adobe CreatePDF desktop printer on a Windows 7 home PC.  When I try to use from Word or EWxcel, it does not print.  The Adobe print device queue reports an "error" in the status column.

    Adobe retired this Feb 17, 2014.
    This app sent content to and got content from the web based services of "CreatPDF" and "PDF Pack".
    These are subscription services out in "the cloud". When the app was live you had to be online and signed into your account.  The user forum for CreatePDF has a DOC that speaks to the app removal.
    Be well...

  • Cannot open Print setting panel in Pages, Open Office, Word......

    I am a new MAC user, and recently when i try to print a document via any APPs, the APPs just force quit and send error report to apple.
    what's happening?
    BTW, i am using EPSON ALC-C3000N, download driver from epson website.

    Have you opened the System Preferences program, clicked on the Printer & Faxes icon, and set up a printer? If you have, don't be insulted, I ask because frequently people don't. If you have, return to that dialog and delete the printer you set up. Then add it again. Sometimes a printer configuration gets messed up and needs to be setup fresh.

Maybe you are looking for