OK...I would need a PowerPoint presentation of a Captivate session to visualize that process!
Regards, David Eason LSI Logic Contract Technical Writer [EMAIL PROTECTED] Phone: 303-544-5433 Cell: 303-941-3512 -----Original Message----- From: Steve Rickaby [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, March 30, 2007 10:58 AM To: Eason, David; Gordon McLean Cc: framers@lists.frameusers.com Subject: RE: NagGram At 10:08 -0600 30/3/07, Eason, David wrote: >The entire civilized, English-speaking world calls the background text or image on a page a "watermark"--but apparently not Adobe. I looked in the index. I looked in the table of contents. I looked in the online help. I did a search for the term "watermark." Using the manual was an exercise in futility, but because I had not started out with high hopes for success in the first place, I ended up frustrated but not disappointed. It gets better than that. In Acrobat, you can impose... er, overlay... er... mix in another PDF, typically containing a watermark. Acrobat allows you to insert the mixed-in image below the page contents of the current document, which it calls a 'background', or on top of the contents of the current page, which it calls a... 'watermark'. Uh? -- Steve _______________________________________________ You are currently subscribed to Framers as [EMAIL PROTECTED] Send list messages to [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] or visit http://lists.frameusers.com/mailman/options/framers/archive%40mail-archive.com Send administrative questions to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Visit http://www.frameusers.com/ for more resources and info.