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

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