We are using Adobe DC Pro and have had terrible print issues. Is there someone we can talk to on the phone. Not sure how to share a screen shot, but using Windows 7 and my printers as one that says Adobe PDF and Adobe Converter PDF.
Yesterday I tried to print again from Excel to the Adobe PDF printer, NOT to a file - just to the printer. It opened a window for me to save it, which I did - to my desktop. But it's not ON my desktop.
Adobe PDF Converter is the name of the Adobe printer, which is renamed later as Adobe PDF Printer. You can remove all the listed Adobe PDF Printer and Adobe PDF converter, reboot the machine and add the PDF printer manually, to add the PDF printer manually, please refer to the steps mentioned in the Adobe article Adobe PDF printer is missing Manually install PDF printer
In an authoring application such as Adobe InDesign, chooseFile > Print. Select Adobe PDF as theprinter, and click the Properties (or Preferences) button. (In someapplications, you may need to click Setup in the Print dialog boxto access the list of printers, and then click Properties or Preferencesto customize the Adobe PDF settings.)
PDF-specific options appear on the Adobe PDF Settings tab. The Paper Quality tab and Layout tab contain other familiar options for the paper source, printer ink, page orientation, and number of pages per sheet.
Printing Preferences are different from printer Properties. The Preferences include Adobe PDF-specific options for the conversion process; the Properties dialog box contains tabs of options that are available for any type of printer.
PrintingProperties are different from printer Preferences. The Propertiesdialog box contains tabs of options that apply to any type of printer;the Preferences include conversion options specifically for the AdobePDF printer.
In an authoring application such as Adobe InDesign,choose File > Print. Select Adobe PDF asthe printer, and click the Properties button. (In some applications,you may need to click Setup in the Print dialog box to open thelist of printers, and then click Properties or Preferences to customizethe Adobe PDF settings.)
Before go out to buy a converter/transformer (you need over 2KW for all 3 of them), please check the switches at the back, they may have switches to switch from 110V to 220V. I don't know your market, my suggestion: talk with an electrician who knows the real world much better.
I'm communicating with a logic analyzer (HP 1660A) over RS232. I issue a command which tells the analyzer to print screen its display and send it over to the controller (my pc) through serial communication. I'm saving the result (which is usually abut 25kB) to my computer and I would like to view it as a TIFF or other format. The problem is that the response from the analyzer comes in PCL format, therefore suitable to be sent to a printer and printed directly, but not to be opened as an image. I have tried a few PCL to image converters to do the job, I found one which does it properly, however I've used the trial version and I am reluctant to purchase it. I've given you the background of my labour. I would appreciate any kind of help, a reference to the commands in pcl 1 and what should I do in order to extract the data and format it properly from the PCL file. I have no experience with PCL and image processing whatsoever, so please, give me a hand here. Thank you.
P.S. I've obtained the PCL file from the analyzer, both in C# and matlab... I have one slight problem in C# with the serial port control, some images have some uninterpreted characters in the image, when using the above converters. I say all these because I need an algorithm or some indications, no matter the programming language, so please feel free to post.
My app is fully functional with ZPL that I tested on a TLP 2824 Plus, but I discovered the actual printer that will be used is a TLP 2844 that only use EPL language (before any question, the TLP 2824 is defective, so just good for tests).
I have a Canon MG2220 All-in One printer scanner. When I do a scan using the installed software on the computer it seems I only have one option and that is a PDF document. I would like an editable Microsoft Word document but I ca seem to find a way to do this. I tried converting the PDF to a TIFF file but it seems that I need to have Microsoft Document Imaging to get the document to a WORD file. I do not have Microsoft Document Imaging installed on my computer in my Office 2007 and I do not have the option to install it.
We do have a step by step guide for how to extract text from a scan available for your printer using OCR! You can find it here: It will convert the text to a notepad document that you can then copy and paste into Microsoft Word if needed.
The Manhattan Full-Speed USB to DB25 Parallel Printer Converter with bi-directional data transfer easily supports USB-to-parallel and parallel-to-USB communication. Ideal for connecting USB-equipped desktop or notebook computers to a parallel printer or adding a DB25 female port, it helps deliver faster data transfer rates than a standard parallel port.
Using doPDF you convert to PDF any type of printable document (i.e. DOCX, XLSX, PPTX, PUBX, HTML, TXT,...), accessing its functionality through a printer driver interface.
Simply click on "Print" from any document-related Windows app to have your PDF created.
I want to convert a USB Type B receptacle on a printer to an ethernet adapter. I know they make USB Type A to ethernet adapters. But I don't see USB Type B to ethernet adapters. USB Type B is downstream; I don't even know if it would work. First, is it possible to convert a USB Type B to USB Type A on a printer? Second, is it possible to convert USB Type B on a printer to an ethernet adapter? Would ethernet even work?
The easiest way to solve your problem would be to use a router with a USB port (that already contains appropriate software support aka print server) to talk to the printer, should you have one spare. If you are willing to opt for a DIY solution then a Raspberry Pi with a default GNU/Linux distro should be an excellent project with projected costs of around 35 including a power supply. For an off-the-shelf solution please look at @RedGrittyBrick's answer.
GDI printers are notoriously hard to network. They typically only work if networked via another PC. In other words, most printservers will not work with GDI printers. Some combinations do work though. If you're thinking of getting a printserver, make sure you first check the manufacturers' compatibility list. If your printer is not listed, then you must assume it will not work.
I recently upgraded to Adobe Acrobat X. I had no problem with converting Microsoft Publisher files with Acrobat 9 but now I get an error message that reads: adobe pdf printer is not bound to adobe pdf port. It will not convert, plus Acrobat X freezes after a few minutes, which causes me to shutdown the software via the Task Manager.
Depending on the specially of the converter, many other processes might be involved. These might include: shearing, die-cutting, laser cutting, heat sealing, laser converting, perforating, Ultrasonic welding, Surface finishing, etc.[6]
Some converting companies now incorporate electronics in their finished products. For example, converters producing RFID stock labels must incorporate RFID chips and antenna inlays.[7] The electronic components make up the RFID tag. The tag stores the information about the items that have been tagged. These converters therefore sometimes incorporate volume electronics manufacturing practices including controlling static electricity, electronic manufacturing test and similar processes. Solving some of the issues of inclusion of materials sensitive to external influences has led to more tech companies embracing roll-based manufacturing processes, with particular success in the lithium ion and solar cell manufacturing sectors.[8]
I am printing on a Zebra ZM400 using ZPL code. I can download images to the printer using Zebra's utilities, and I can recall those images to print on a label, but I need to be able to download images using ZPL code (using the DG command). The DG command needs the JPG image to be in ASCII format. I have other images that were already converted to ASCII (by someone else) that I am able to print, so I know everything I am doing works as expected, however my problem is I have new images that need to be converted to the ASCII format required and I am not sure how to do this.
Are you currently connecting with your Zebra ZM400 through LabVIEW? Are you trying to convert the JPG files to ASCII in LabVIEW, or do you want to convert the files before running your program? If you're only doing this for a few images, I think the easiest way to accomplish this would be with an online JPG to ASCII converter. There is no built-in LabVIEW function for converting from JPG to ASCII. If you wish to do this with LabVIEW, you would need to implement an application that can do this conversion.
I've been trying to do further research into printing JPG files on Zebra printers, but I'm still not entirely sure how you want this file to be formatted. Could you offer some further explanation as to how this was done before?
When you say that they can print JPG files if they're converted to ASCII format, do you mean just changing the format of the file to ASCII? In LabVIEW you could import a JPG file, read it as a binary file, then save it as a text file. This would take the binary of the JPG file and convert it to an ASCII file. Is this the format that your printer wants for printing images?
The ZM400 printer uses Zebra's ZPL II language to create/format labels and for printer setup/control. Instead of Download Graphic (DG), I am now using the command Download Object (DY), which can be found in the ZPL II programming guide (p 182). This allowed me to use a .PNG file instead of a JPG, which was easier to work with.
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