Snow Leopard, Acrobat files and ebook conversion: Incompatible?

A publisher I'm working with tells me that Snow Leopard now makes it impossible to create PDF files without CID fonts (either directly from InDesign, for example, or by distilling PS files)--and that such PDFs with CID fonts are incompatible with any of the e-book conversion services and any standard search-inside-PDF technologies. They tell me they will have to build PDFs from InDesign files using older tools in order to meet the requirements for e-books.
I've been unable to find any discussion of this issue by Googling various key terms--finding only some outdated info re cid fonts and problems with non-Adobe PS printers/rasterizers some years ago.
Can anyone shed light on this?

Thanks, Marcus and Jeremy.
I talked further with my production manager, and can clarify the issue a bit.
The problem with inclusion of CID fonts is that ebook conversion tools in use today drop any paragraph containing them. (The typical production path would be to produce PDFs for the printer, then mine the same PDFs to produce ebook versions.)
Why the various producers of these tools ignored the existence of CID fonts, which, as Adobe points out, have been part of the PostScript language definition for over 10 years, escapes me.
The manager reports that his IT head had a several-hour discussion with Adobe re this issue, with the result that it seems that there is no workaround at the moment.

Similar Messages

  • Snow Leopard changing files and folders to aliases

    At random times, Snow Leopard is changing random files and folders to aliases that point to nothing. The original file or folder is lost! This is a very, very serious flaw in the operating system. For the four files I've lost this way, I was able to restore them with Time Machine. I only noticed these files were lost by chance. What will happen to those that I haven't noticed? When my Time Machine partition becomes full and it starts eliminating older versions, those that I haven't noticed will be gone forever. A file system is supposed to preserve my data for me; I shouldn't have to worry about it. And I shouldn't have to rely on Time Machine for flaws in the file management system. This is very, very bad! It is not possible to overstate how very bad this is. Has anyone else noticed this? Does Apple know about this? Is there a known cause? Is there a known fix?
    Message was edited by: required desired alias

    I haven't looked at any console logs. I'll have to figure out how to do that. I suppose I have to do it soon after I discover that a file has been altered.
    It has happened to my data files in the data partition.
    There are lots of good reasons for separating the system and applications from my data. It makes backup management easier. My data I want to backup frequently. I don't want to backup the system very frequently. If the system develops a bug, I don't want a backup of the system to overwrite a good old system in my backup drive before I discover the bug. A separate partition for my data makes backups of my data faster. There are thousands of files down there in the system and with everything in a single partition even incremental backups (via SuperDuper) take a long time to scan through all that system junk to find differences. I don't like to have to drill down three levels in the file hierarchy to find my stuff in the user folder. My data partition sits on the desktop as it did in systems 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9. If I keep my data in a separate partition, I can do anything that I want with the access permissions for my data. (Don't ever mess with the permissions in the system partition; it can really screw things up.) I can set the permissions so that I don't have any problems when accessing my data from another computer or as another user. Systems break occasionally and it's easy to restore just the system and applications from a backup of just that. I never have to go back to the install disc; if you restore from an install disc, you have to download and install all of the system updates posted since your install disc was printed, you might have to reinstall applications, you have to find all of your registration numbers for your applications, you lose all of your preferences. I also sometimes run multiple systems. I never buy into a new system right away. I keep both the new system and my old system in separate partitions while I try out the new one. If I find unacceptable bugs or limitations in the new system, it's easy to switch back to the old. If I find I've got an application that has been rendered obsolete by the new system, I can easily switch back to the old system. I mirror my data partition to my laptop. The system can't be mirrored to another computer and all that I want over there is the stuff on my data partition anyway. Mirroring the data is simple when it is all collected in a separate partition in both my desktop and my laptop.
    I'm passionate about partitioning. In the Mac I just retired, I had 4 physical drives, but I repartitioned them creating RAID arrays (for speed) such that each of the 4 virtual partitions (system, data, scratch, & backup system) did not correspond to any physical drive. It worked fine for years.

  • Installing Mountain Lion from Snow Leopard, Install failed and HD write-locked

    I recently downloaded the mountain lion installer from the App Store and I ran the installer. Stupid person as I am, I did not have any backups for my file and I naively assumed that an apple OS installer would be without flaws. Boy, was I wrong. I need every bytes of my data (or close to every bytes) but the installer failed.
    Mid installation, the installer stopped and said that the installation failed and that I need to repair my disk. So I restarted the computer and I ran disk utilities (my start up disk was the OS installer and the installer allows me to run several programs, including terminal, disk utilities, and by the way, when I held option while starting up to see which start up disks I have, I only had the OS installer as the start up disk. Also, the installer allows me to run a program called "Startup Disk" when I click on the apple logo on the top left corner, but it doesn't allow me to startup my computer using Macintosh HD) and noticed that when I highlighted Macintosh HD, my "Repair Disk" button was grayed out. So first things first, I ran the "Verify Disk" button but after a minute or so, Disk Utilities said that verification failed and that Macintosh HD needs to be repaired. But the "repair disk" button is grayed out! So I went to the Mountain Lion installer again and ran it. Of course, it failed again so I restarted the computer.
    So I tried to first back up all files in Macintosh HD to an external hard drive using Disk Utilities, and I used features such as "New Image" and "Restore" but they both ended up in "Input/Output error". I tried many methods with Disk Utilities but they resulted in errors.
    After some research, I noticed that some people's computers worked after they reset their PRAM. So that's what I did. I held command+option+P+R when computer started up and I reset the PRAM. When the start up disk (which is the OS installer, not the normal operating system) loaded, I was greeted with choose languages option and then I was back in the Mountain Lion installer state. I again ran the installer again, hoping something would be different, but then it was different. But not in a good way. When I was told to choose where I would like to install Mountain Lion, I noticed that Macintosh HD was grayed out. Last time, I was at least able to run the installer but this time, Macintosh HD was grayed out. The installer said that my Macintosh HD was locked. After some research, I learned that apparently, the Mountain Lion installer write-locks Macintosh HD mid installation.
    So now I am stuck and I am thinking of two things (plus some questions)
    1. I am wondering if there is a way to unlock Macintosh HD. But even if I can unlock Macintosh HD, there is no guarantee that the installer will successfully install Mountain Lion, am I right?
    a. so how can I un-write-lock Macintosh HD?
    2. More realistically, I am thinking of borrowing someone else's macintosh computer and use it as the backup center. I have a firewire cable and a terrabyte external hard drive. So what I'm thinking is that I'll hook my computer in target mode to my friend's computer and I will also plug in my external hard drive to my friend's computer and then I can download and run Carbon Copy Cloner from my friend's computer to copy all data from my Macintosh HD to my external hard drive. And then I will erase my Macintosh HD, freshly install Mountain Lion onto it and then copy all data back from my external hard drive. But I am not sure about few things.
    a. it looks like my Macintosh HD is write-locked. Can I still use Carbon Copy Cloner to copy all data from Macintosh HD (in target mode) to my external hard drive?
    b. will my computer allow me to erase (or format) Macintosh HD?
    c. will my erased/formatted Macintosh HD able to install + be installed Mountain Lion OS?
    If you are here, then you have read my long long problem. Thank you very much and I would really really really appreciate your answers and opinions. Thanks

    I'm not sure where you read that about the disk being "write-locked." That doesn't make much sense, given that the major task an installer like this must achieve is writing a whole bunch of files to the hard drive. I think your source was mistaken.
    As to what happened, it sounds like your hard drive was badly corrupt to start with, or possibly was on the edge of failing and is now in the process of dying entirely. If you don't have backups of your data, that does not bode well for you, unfortunately. If you can manage to use target mode to copy your data, do that.
    Once you're sure you've got all your data, you need to start up from your Snow Leopard install disk and repair the hard drive. (Since it sounds like the Mountain Lion installer didn't work, I wouldn't trust the recovery partition that Mountain Lion installs.) Or, even better, just erase the hard drive entirely and reinstall Snow Leopard. Then, once you're back up and running, with all your data back on the system and with Snow Leopard updated to the most recent version, try installing Mountain Lion again. If any of that fails again, the problem is likely to be a dying hard drive, and you'll need to replace it.

  • I just update my Mac operating system from Snow Leopard to Yosemite and now have to upgrade my Epson Printer WF3540 so that it will be able to scan. Will Adobe be compatible with these softwares?

    I just update my Mac operating system from Snow Leopard to Yosemite and now have to upgrade my Epson Printer WF3540 so that it will be able to scan. Will Adobe be compatible with these softwares?

    Hi spiritentrep,
    What Adobe software are you referring to? Are you using Acrobat? You should have no problems running Acrobat XI on Yosemite, and as along as you have compatible scanner drivers for your Epson, you should be fine there as well.
    Best,
    Sara

  • I own Snow Leopard Family Pack and an acquaintance installed it onto their MBP without permission. How can I revoke that license?

    I own Snow Leopard Family Pack and an acquaintance installed it onto their MacBook Pro without permission. How can I revoke that license? I don't have access to their MBP, but I have access to all the other authorized computers using the family pack.

    No. The license is a legal agreement, not a technical measure to restrict installation or duplication. There's nothing to stop you from installing it on 20 Macs in your household save that you are subject to a binding legal agreement that says you have permission to install it on no more than 5. If you break the terms of the contract, you may be subject to civil litigation. If someone steals your copy and uses it without authorization, they are similarly liable.
    In practice, Apple trusts you to be honest because, frankly, until it gets to a certain point, it's just not worth the money to file a complaint against you. That's not to say that they couldn't, or even shouldn't enforce the terms of the license agreement; caveat sycophanta.

  • I downloaded latest software on iphone 4 and installed new software on my imac (snow leopard 8.6 and now phone not synching with new itunes. Itunes does recognize the phone but the itunes is totally different now. It doesn't look anything like the previou

    I downloaded latest software on iphone 4 and installed new software on my imac (snow leopard 8.6)and now phone not synching with new itunes. Itunes does recognize the phone but the itunes is totally different now. It doesn't look anything like the previous vesions. I can't even find a tab for synching. very strange. any help is appriciated.

    iTunes 10.7 is compatible with Snow Leopard.
    You can download it here: http://www.apple.com/itunes/

  • 3 Beep when i try to boot Snow Leopard (after memory and sad upgrade)

    Good night,
    I have a Macbook Pro Later 2011 with Yosemite installed and today i tried to upgrade memory and SSD.
    Memory: 16GB 1600MHz DDR3 (2x8) Corsair 11-11-11-30 1.35v
    SSD: Corsair 120GB Sata 3 Force GT
    After installation of my new gear, i tried to install OS X Snow Leopard through DVD and i get this 3 beep when boot start.
    So i reinstalled the original hard drive, keep the new 16gb and started correctly.
    Tried boot DVD again with the original hard drive and new 16gb but the 3 beep continues...
    Then i removed the 16gb, but still doing this 3 beep stuff when i try boot from DVD.
    I tried all combinations with new and old hardware but nothing more works...
    I have changed the slots with both, the 16gb and old 4gb.
    Could be the DVD corrupted?
    Now im running my Yosemite with the original hard drive and the new 16gb memory without any issue.
    Im already do the memory test nothing wrong appear in results
    My configuration:
    MacBook Pro (17 polegadas, Final de 2011)
    Processador 2,4 GHz Omte; Cpre i7
    Memória 16 GB 1600 MHz DDR3
    Gráficos Intel HD Graphics 3000 512 MB
    Could anyone help me plz?
    ps. sorry for my english

    The DVD's too old for that Mac. If you need to install an OS on it, connect it to the Internet and start it up with the Option, Command, and R keys held down.
    (110037)

  • I had OS 10.5.8 on my Macbook and couldn't run turbotax 2012 because of that. I purchased Snow leopard on CD and installed it. Now, about my ABOUT this mac says 10.6.8. Now, I can't print to my Lexmark z705. I get an error message.

    I had OS 10.5.8 on my Macbook and couldn't run turbotax 2012 because of that. I purchased Snow leopard on CD and installed it. Now, about my ABOUT this mac says OS 10.6.8. Now, I can't print to my Lexmark z705. I get an error message with no explanation.

    Unless there are drivers provided by Apple to work with the printer, you're out of luck. The latest drivers provided by Lexmark are for OS X 10.4 Intel. Unfortunately, this can happen when slightly older peripherals and newer software don't mesh. 

  • Running snow leopard on MBP and am not getting an sound alerts for Mail or Calendar; Have checked all setting in sound in the system preferences

    Running snow leopard on MBP and am not getting an sound alerts for Mail or Calendar; Have checked all setting in sound in the system preferences

    Hi..
    For Mail, from your Mail menu bar (top of your screen) click Mail > Preferences then select the General tab.
    Click the pop up menu to the right of New messages sound to make a selection.

  • Did an adobe update this morning then several of my programs now marked as acrobate files and will not open

    did an adobe update this morning then several of my programs now marked as acrobate files and will not open so i uninstalled acrobat reader and tried reinstalling it several times using google, google chrome and internet explorer and still getting the same problem please advise

    Hi Greg ,
    Could you please provide me the details of the Acrobat version and updates?
    Try uninstalling it with the help of cleaner tool once again and try to install it back from the following link .
    https://helpx.adobe.com/acrobat/kb/acrobat-downloads.html
    Here is the link for Cleaner Tool .
    http://labs.adobe.com/downloads/acrobatcleaner.html
    Disable all the third party software before installing it .
    Regards
    Sukrit Dhingra

  • My iMac says I have 10.6.8 operating system now. Problem is I do not know if that is 'Lion' or 'Snow Leopard' ... and I wish to upgrade to 'Mountain Lion'

    My iMac says I have 10.6.8 operating system now. Problem is I do not know if that is 'Lion' or 'Snow Leopard' ... and I wish to upgrade to 'Mountain Lion'

    That is Snow Leopard.
    Upgrading to Snow Leopard, Lion, or Mountain Lion
    Upgrading to Snow Leopard
    You can purchase Snow Leopard by contacting Customer Service: Contacting Apple for support and service - this includes international calling numbers. The price is $19.99 plus tax. You will receive physical media - DVD - by mail.
    Third-party sources for Snow Leopard are:
    Snow Leopard from Amazon.com
    Snow Leopard from eBay
    After you install Snow Leopard you will have to download and install the Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Combo v1.1 to update Snow Leopard to 10.6.8 and give you access to the App Store.
    Before upgrading check that you computer meets the minimum requirements:
    Snow Leopard General requirements
      1. Mac computer with an Intel processor
      2. 1GB of memory
      3. 5GB of available disk space
      4. DVD drive for installation
      5. Some features require a compatible Internet service provider; fees may
          apply.
      6. Some features require Apple’s MobileMe service; fees and terms apply.
    Upgrading to Lion
    First, you need to upgrade to Snow Leopard 10.6.8 as stated above.
    You can purchase Lion by contacting Customer Service: Contacting Apple for support and service - this includes international calling numbers. The cost is $19.99 (as it was before) plus tax.  It's a download. You will get an email containing a redemption code that you then use at the Mac App Store to download Lion. Save a copy of that installer to your Downloads folder because the installer deletes itself at the end of the installation.
    Before upgrading check that you computer meets the minimum requirements:
    Lion System Requirements
      1. Mac computer with an Intel Core 2 Duo, Core i3, Core i5, Core i7, or
          Xeon processor
      2. 2GB of memory
      3. OS X v10.6.6 or later (v10.6.8 recommended)
      4. 7GB of available space
      5. Some features require an Apple ID; terms apply.
    Upgrading to Mountain Lion
    Be sure your computer meets the minimum requirements:
    Apple - OS X Mountain Lion - Read the technical specifications.
    Macs that can be upgraded to OS X Mountain Lion
      1. iMac (Mid 2007 or newer)
      2. MacBook (Late 2008 Aluminum, or Early 2009 or newer)
      3. MacBook Pro (Mid/Late 2007 or newer)
      4. MacBook Air (Late 2008 or newer)
      5. Mac mini (Early 2009 or newer)
      6. Mac Pro (Early 2008 or newer)
      7. Xserve (Early 2009)
    Are my applications compatible?
    See App Compatibility Table - RoaringApps - App compatibility and feature support for OS X & iOS.
    Am I eligible for the free upgrade?
    See Apple - Free OS X Mountain Lion upgrade Program.
    For a complete How-To introduction from Apple see Apple - Upgrade your Mac to OS X Mountain Lion.

  • Upgraded from osx snow leopard to lion and still no iCloud

    Upgraded from osx snow leopard to lion and still no iCloud settings in System Preferences, why?

    I have the exact same issue, and no Profiles for me under System. My system was upgraded from 10.6 as soon as Lion came out and I've never had the icon.
    I have had iCloud set up by creating an account within Mail, Contacts & Calendars - but in this setup my Mobile Documents folder, my iCloud "Documents and Data", never synchronized with my other devices. That is why I began wondering why I don't have the iCon as I have seen other Macs that came with 10.7 installed factory.

  • Can i buy one snow leopard 10.6 and upgrade two mac?

    can i buy one snow leopard 10.6 and upgrade two mac?

    The Snow Leopard license that Apple sells only allows you to upgrade one Mac. If you want to upgrade more than one computer, you have to buy the Mac OS X Snow Leopard family pack > http://www.amazon.com/Snow-Leopard-Family-Pack-5-User/dp/B001AMPP0W

  • My imac osx snow leopard turns off and wont recover

    my imac osx snow leopard turns off and wont recover

    I have an IMAC 21.5"/3.06/2X2GB/500GB/4670 year2010 with snow leopard MAC OS X 10.6.8 Yes it spontaneously shuts down while working and I cannot restart unless I disconnect the power supply.

  • I am running 10.5.8 and want to make use of the icloud changeover, I understand that I must first buy snow leopard 10.6 and then buy lion 10.7. Do I buy these as upgrades versions or full versions? I am not very techie, thanks for anya advice

    I am running 10.5.8 and want to make use of the icloud changeover, I understand that I must first buy snow leopard 10.6 and then buy lion 10.7. Do I buy these as upgrade versions or full versions? I am not very techie, thanks for any advice.

    A 10.5 era machine is better left on 10.6.8
    I don't advise upgrading it to 10.7 as you'll have to buy all new versions of software for a older model machine, some are not ready yet and some of your third party driver software may not be available for your other hardware.
    10.7 is slower and requires 4GB of RAM actually.
    10.8 is being released this summer and it won't run on certain older graphic cards, so shortly you will be behind again.
    Save your money for a new 10.8 machine. IMO
    These rapid OS X upgrades are for those who like to be on the cutting edge and can afford to buy new hardware often, you didn't even upgrade to 10.6, so your not that sort of person obviously.
    But you do need to upgrade to 10.6 for security issues and faster video. It will run your 10.5 Rosetta software, but 10.7 will not.
    http://roaringapps.com/apps:table
    https://discussions.apple.com/community/notebooks/macbook_pro?view=documents

Maybe you are looking for

  • How do i retrieve my old iphone account

    Can someone tell me what i need to do. i want to retrieve old contacts and pictures; i dont remember if i did that through iTunes or what not.

  • Syntax error while doing Convert data in LSMW

    Hi experts,       I am using direct input method for uploading customer master records. After display read data step, when i click Convert data button, i get a runtime error saying that:       the data object "LEGACY_CUSTOMER_MASTER" has no component

  • Entering Shift Premium in DWS

    Hello Guru's, Please can you guide me regarding making a DWS with a shift premium. I have to make a DWS (by the name DDE4) for shifts 07:00 till 19:00 with a shift premium of 19%. I am very new to this, so a step by step process will simplify things

  • Multiple channel AI measuremen​t in the same module with synchronis​ed AO

    I  am using NI -9172  for measurment. I am trying to mesure two  AI voltage signals on the same module (NI9215).A sinosoidal  analog input voltage is generated using NI 9263. The AI and AO are synchronised using Ai start trigger signal from NI 9263(

  • Survey about open source projects

    Hello, I'm conducting a survey about how open source projects are organized. It's part of the www.openeo.biz community initiative which goal is to research organizational structures of open source projects and business models of companies related to