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They tend to be based on Ghostscript, the almost GPL utility that
converts from postscript to raster, postscript to PDF etc. Very handy and source code is available. From memory the "first" Windows implementation also used "redmon", a printer port redirector. The idea being that you used standard postscript driver and the output stream normally destined for the printer was fed into the stdin on ghostscript. The output can be set to all types of file or device types. If you go this way it is worthwhile downloading Adobe's distiller PPD and using that instead of a standard Windoze printer driver. Ghostscript is used extensively in Linux to convert PS printer streams to specific printer device types. Pls be careful of the license provisions as it isnt quite open GPL. They tend to leave older versions for almost unrestricted use but more recent ones have rules of use. If of course you are a home/provate user it isnt a problem. Also keep in mind that the Adobe creator does a lot more than just "distill" like the free versions do. Depends on your needs of course! Cheers Bob John Smith wrote: Many here seem to be hung up on .pdf files, adobes pdf creator is expensive. |
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