Unless/when print technologies change, then you might need that step. Until then your existing Acrobat will continue to work with the old license. I still run a #8 version on an old computer.
Alan On 30/10/13 5:54 AM, Mike Wickham wrote: > I'm in that crowd, too. My books go to press and I use Acrobat to > generate my PDF. I'm sure third party choices could work well, too, > but I prefer Acrobat. (That could change if Adobe takes it to a > subscription-only model.) > > Mike Wickham > > On 10/29/2013 10:14 AM, Steve Rickaby wrote: >> At 21:02 -0500 28/10/13, Mike Wickham wrote: >> >>> Nobody needs PDF unless they want to create documents that will >>> retain fonts and formatting to display identically on every >>> computer. But if you want that, you want PDF-- and you probably want >>> Acrobat because it is the most stable and full-featured. >> Those of us who take books to press are tied to PDF/Acrobat, as it's >> become pretty much the mandatory pre-press format. >> > > > _______________________________________________ > > > You are currently subscribed to framers as alan at alphabyte.co.nz. > > Send list messages to framers at lists.frameusers.com. > > To unsubscribe send a blank email to > framers-unsubscribe at lists.frameusers.com > or visit > http://lists.frameusers.com/mailman/options/framers/alan%40alphabyte.co.nz > > Send administrative questions to listadmin at frameusers.com. Visit > http://www.frameusers.com/ for more resources and info. -- Dr Alan Litchfield AlphaByte PO Box 1941 Auckland, New Zealand 1140
