Hello watermen,
Allow me to take a moment and review,
[watermen] Actually like I mentioned in the previous post, you can make a "lesson note" readable under Preview if you use Acrobat Pro to re-save it and embed the font.
[...]
If you can change the font in the "original lesson note" to MSMincho and save it like the way I described and embed the font, that PDF should be able to be read under Preview, in such a case, "lite version" is not needed.
[cwabbott] We automate the generation of all our PDFs, so we cannot follow your instructions on opening and modifying PDFs in Adobe Reader Pro.
Next we reviewed a newly generated PDF after some modifications were made to our generation software:
[watermen] [...] the quality is definitely improved, and the wordings are displayed elegantly like the old PDFs, however there is a downside, you can't highlight or copy the words in the PDF.
So we have managed to get the Lite PDFs to now display elegantly like the old PDFs, and if not 100% the same - we are very close. The downside you mention, copying from the PDF, was also the case for the old PDFs on most computers.
Here is a thread when the PDF change took place (
http://www.japanesepod101.com/forum/vie ... php?t=3602). In the second post I am described some benefits of the new Lesson Notes PDF that is read in Adobe Reader.
[cwabbott] * Searching PDFs now work (it did not work in the old PDFs)
* COPY / PASTE now works - this is very useful to people studying and trying to take notes elsewhere
* The PDFs are now compatible with special accessibility software (ie. screen readers)
* There are bookmarks already in place for you to quick-click
The Lesson Notes and the Lesson Notes Lite PDFs are the exact same in content. However, they serve 2 separate purposes.
The Lesson Notes PDF is designed to support many advanced PDF options and will act more like a traditional PDF. Thus it supports copy / paste, screen reading software, and other soon-to-be utilized features. However, Adobe Reader is only officially supported and recommended for viewing.
The Lesson Notes Lite PDF is designed to be read on any device regardless if Adobe Reader or the correct fonts are available.
Now, allow me to quickly address a few questions you had.
[watermen] Why is it so hard to change the font in the original lesson note?
In the Lesson Notes PDF we use Adobe standard font packs, we have no plans of changing from the standard font packs.
[watermen]
...if you use Acrobat Pro to re-save it and embed the font.
[...]
If you can change the font in the "original lesson note" to MSMincho and save it like the way I described and embed the font, that PDF should be able to be read under Preview...
[...]
Till now, I still don't know what software you use to generate the PDF, so I can't comment on that part.
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This is a problem that can be solved very instantly without much trouble.
This appears to be the general direction of your remaining questions, suggestions, and assumptions (please add to it if I am missing some other question you may have posted).
We do not use Adobe Pro to generate the PDFs. Across our sites we use several open source server libraries for automatic generation of PDFs. These libraries are written in C, PHP, and shell scripts.
When you fully embed the Japanese font MSMincho it will create a PDF that is 5.6MB in size, this is not acceptable. We partially embed the font in the Lesson Notes Lite to avoid the filesize issue. Additionally, we flatten the PDF to save space, which creates a PDF that is viewable on any device, but it does not allow for copy and paste or other advanced features.
As with most interoperability concerns, this is not a solution that can be reached instantly or in only one way. Our current system provides 2 PDFs for all of our members, one that follows Adobe standards and can be read on any machine that uses the free Adobe reader, and another that supports reading from any device and reader that can open a PDF.
The quality and functionality of both will never be equal, since they were designed with two different purposes in mind.
We will continue to evaluate new options as the become available. Thank you for your patience, and I hope this clarifies things.
Charles Abbott