OOs Writer:
I am able to include the companies EPS logo.
I am also able to print it with Adobe Acrobat and on any (color) printer.
What I am missing is to see the graphic on screen (Windows XP).
Is this a fault in my installation or do I have to do something to get
EPS shown on screen?
--
Rolf
ccornell - OpenOffice.org wrote:
> [snip]
>> ok, that works, C. Thank you.
>>
>> However, the quality is very bad: dithered black and white only. I
>> should find something different or enhance the preview. Otherwise people
>> will prefer jpg or tif regardless how printing quality suffers.
>
> I
[snip]
ok, that works, C. Thank you.
However, the quality is very bad: dithered black and white only. I
should find something different or enhance the preview. Otherwise people
will prefer jpg or tif regardless how printing quality suffers.
I did a little experimenting here... try opening the
ccornell - OpenOffice.org wrote:
> Rolf Schumacher wrote:
>> The next question: do you know of a piece of software that converts a
>> EPS without preview to one with preview, keeping the print quality of
>> EPS?
>
> The Gimp can do it. When you save an image as EPS, the Save (or
> Save-As) dialo
Rolf Schumacher wrote:
The next question: do you know of a piece of software that converts a
EPS without preview to one with preview, keeping the print quality of EPS?
The Gimp can do it. When you save an image as EPS, the Save (or
Save-As) dialog has a checkbox for Preview. I've tested and u
ccornell - OpenOffice.org wrote:
> Rolf Schumacher wrote:
>> OOs Writer:
>>
>> I am able to include the companies EPS logo.
>> I am also able to print it with Adobe Acrobat and on any (color)
>> printer.
>> What I am missing is to see the graphic on screen (Windows XP).
>>
>> Is this a fault in m
On 20/08/07, ccornell - OpenOffice.org <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Harold Fuchs wrote:
> [snip]
> >> Please excuse my ignorance but what is EPS in this context?
>
> Encapsulated PostScript. It's an image format that is generally used
> when image quality on printed output is important/critical
Harold Fuchs wrote:
[snip]
Please excuse my ignorance but what is EPS in this context?
Encapsulated PostScript. It's an image format that is generally used
when image quality on printed output is important/critical (for example
with Logos.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Encapsulated_PostScri
On 20/08/07, ccornell - OpenOffice.org <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Rolf Schumacher wrote:
> > OOs Writer:
> >
> > I am able to include the companies EPS logo.
> > I am also able to print it with Adobe Acrobat and on any (color)
> printer.
> > What I am missing is to see the graphic on screen (Wi
Rolf Schumacher wrote:
OOs Writer:
I am able to include the companies EPS logo.
I am also able to print it with Adobe Acrobat and on any (color) printer.
What I am missing is to see the graphic on screen (Windows XP).
Is this a fault in my installation or do I have to do something to get
EPS sh
OOs Writer:
I am able to include the companies EPS logo.
I am also able to print it with Adobe Acrobat and on any (color) printer.
What I am missing is to see the graphic on screen (Windows XP).
Is this a fault in my installation or do I have to do something to get
EPS shown on screen?
rolf
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