PDF Is Now ISO 32000 410
It is official. As PDF Architect Jim King blogged today, Adobe has received word that the ballot for approval of PDF 1.7 to become the ISO 32000 Standard (DIS) has passed by a vote of 13 positive to 1 negative. A two-thirds majority is required to pass so it was a large margin of victory (93%). The vote breaks down as follows: Countries voting positive with no comments (9): Australia, Bulgaria, China, Japan, Poland, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Ukraine. Countries voting positive with comments (4): UK (13 comments), USA (125), Germany (11), Switzerland (19). Countries voting negative with comments (1): France (37 comments). Countries abstaining (1): Russia.
ISO? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:ISO? (Score:5, Informative)
PDFBox [pdfbox.org] - OSS Library for modifying PDFs on the fly.
FOP [apache.org] - Use XSL-FO to design printable page layouts in XML, then use FOP to transform them to PDF documents.
Foxit Tools [foxitsoftware.com] - Alternative to the overpriced Adobe products.
OpenOffice [openoffice.org] - The built-in support for PDFs is absolutely wonderful. I rarely give out DOC files anymore.
FPDF [fpdf.org] - PHP PDF generation tools.
iText [lowagie.com] - A great library for your own custom PDF generation.
Those are just a few. The PDF format itself is actually not too bad. (When Adobe isn't breaking it with needless revisions, that is.) It's biggest strength is that the psuedo-text nature of the format allows one to diagnose the internals of a file pretty easily. Its greatest weakness is that things like text fields are needlessly convoluted. At the end of the day, though, it's a pretty good format.
Re:ISO? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:ISO? (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:ISO? (Score:4, Informative)
PDFLib [pdflib.com] - The standard (and powerful) PDF Library for PHP5
PDFLib Lite [pdflib.com] - The OpenSource version of the above
FPDI [setasign.de] - Imports existing PDF documents into FPDF
PDFLib Lite is a great tool for dynamically creating PDF documents on the FLY with PHP. Or, FPDF & FPDI if you don't mind a slight performance hit.
Re:ISO? (Score:5, Interesting)
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http://sourceforge.net/projects/pdfcreator/ [sourceforge.net]
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Re:ISO? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:ISO? (Score:4, Insightful)
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That said, your reader will only display the thumbnails by default if there isn't a proper index. The index is better, because you get a textual list of the contents of your pdf file and can go straight to the chapter/section you want, but even if you have the index you can display thumbnails instead. I hate pdfs that dont have indexes.
What a useless format (Score:3, Funny)
France... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:France... (Score:5, Insightful)
The Russians (Score:5, Funny)
Re:France... (Score:5, Insightful)
Fact is that some proprietary formats become defacto standards. If the proprietary owners are willing to make them more open then they should be recognized as official standards."
Because PDF works and can be implemented?
There are many implementations of PDF including commercial and open source ones. They can interoperate with high fidelity. OOXML isn't even implemented according to the specs in MS Office 2007 and there are no other reliable implementations.
Re:PDF works (Score:5, Informative)
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The big issue was, I think, that if they had PDF in MSOffice, they could artificially deprectate it by having a 'This format may not save all the features of this document, use ours instead'. That was the groklaw suspicion I recall. Everyone else says 'use this, use ours, whatever you want', which does
Re:France... (Score:4, Insightful)
If Microsoft bundles software with its products and/or integrates new features, other companies like Adobe, Netscape or Realmedia often fear that they will sell fewer of their products. Unfortunately, this means that Microsoft products often can't have features other operating systems or office packages have (PDF export, a decent web browser,
Claus
Re:France... (Score:4, Informative)
Of course the various other shenanigans (such as alleged bribery attempts and quasi ballet stuffing) that plagued the OOXML submission probably haven't helped either.
Re:France... (Score:5, Insightful)
I might also add that the entire point behind the ambiguity in OOXML is to lock users into Microsoft Office. I can use any PDF viewer, because it is a well defined standard, but if the only viewer that displayed PDF's 100% correctly was Adobe's, I'd have to use them. Same idea with OOXML. If 90% of the world uses Microsoft's interpretation of the standard, and I try to use something else, everyone else is going to have trouble with my documents. I'll have to use Microsoft Office, or have people be annoyed with my poorly formed documents.
I'm not anti-Microsoft, I'm just disgusted with this issue.
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Because this format is technically pretty good, while Microsoft's format is technically bad.
Fact is that some proprietary formats become defacto standards
Microsoft's format wasn't rejected because it was from Microsoft, it was rejected because it was bad and needed work. If (and only if) Microsoft is willing to put in the work and make changes to the format, then OOXML can become an ISO standard as well.
Re:France... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:France... (Score:5, Insightful)
Let me count the ways that PDF succeeds:
If OOXML met these criteria, it would stand a fair chance of becoming an accepted standard, too. But Microsoft does not seem to think that meeting these criteria are in its best interests, presumably because that would mean that people could use OOXML without buying licenses to Microsoft products. Microsoft isn't thinking clearly at this time; it is confusing some of the fantasy aspects of its "vision" with the evolving realities of the market it is trying to sell product to.
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They can say hey we can do that too, but not promote the product other than an alternative, an alternative they have no expectation that the client base would be able to actually commit to.
Comments? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Comments? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Comments? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Comments? (Score:5, Funny)
Hello, nice site :)
Posted by: Brin | December 4, 2007 01:26 PM
I think Brin left a really nice comment. How he/she made it from MySpace to an article about ISO 32000 Standards is a bit confusing.
In case we forget. (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's not get started about process and quality management and the yellow sticky of approval that is ISO-9000.
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Go Figure on France (Score:3, Informative)
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I know many French people, and they're opposed to proprietary software becoming an ISO standard, especially with patent and copyright as it stands now here in the US.
What? This is about the PDF format becoming a standard not about any proprietary software. If we called it PDF ala XPDF the free and open source PDF reader, would the French be more in support of it? As for copyright and patent, there is a free as in beer license that provides patent protection for anyone making PDF tools that adhere to the standard.
Re:Go Figure on France (Score:5, Interesting)
But then again, I know many French people, and they're opposed to proprietary software becoming an ISO standard, especially with patent and copyright as it stands now here in the US.
Dude, I'm French, I live in France, and not only do I not have an opinion on whether or not proprietary software becoming an ISO standard is bad, but I don't know anyone here or matter of fact anywhere who would have an opinion on this or even hear about such a process.
Where on Earth do you find your Frenchmen? And why on Earth do you all act like we're all behind this vote? We've got riots and strikes going on, but wait, PDF is about to become an ISO standard! Let's all stop burning cars to prevent this from happening! Merde, too late! What will become of us!?!
Re:Go Figure on France (Score:5, Funny)
I have no illusions however, they hate my fucking US guts
What the hell is wrong with you people? (Disclaimer : I'm French and I live in France). Why do Americans seem to love so much the idea that the rest of the world (and particularly the French and Arabs) hates them viscerally? The video you linked to was made by a bunch of liberal hippies who, just like all liberal hippies from San Francisco to Prague, like to bash George Bush, the military industrial complex and large corporations.
That doesn't mean we hate you, none of us hates you or America in here, you stupid fat pig!
Oh crap, did I say it out loud? I was supposed to "keep it under covers", like the sneaky Frenchman that I am..
Re:Go Figure on France (Score:5, Informative)
So now Americans need to save face. And bashing France at every turn is a way for us to do that. And making it seem like the French hate us is even better, because it justifies our behavior.
The reality on the ground is very different of course. I remember going to Normandie around D-Day 2004, and seeing all the American flags flying. I imagine they were mostly new additions because of the anniversary and Bush's visit, but still it would be hard to imagine an American city being decked out with French flags to celebrate an occasion here. A major street in Caen is still named "Avenue du Six Juin". It was instructive to see the American bluster about France forgetting what we'd done for her, compared to the quiet steadfastness on display there.
-Esme
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If that was the case, that is France and Europeans in general really loved the USA they would have supported us with the various wars against the ARABS.
You know what's wrong with you? Your problem is that you seem to think that "arab" is an acronym. It's not.
Both of your respective communities seem to be into complete denial about what the rest of the world is like, what personal responsibility is, what it is to respect people from different culture than yours and frankly have a huge disregard for life.
Adobe (Score:4, Insightful)
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Do you think it would open any faster if the same document was compressed down to 10K?
I think the point you're trying to make is that the reader's footprint is too large.
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Re:Adobe (Score:5, Informative)
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Sure, and with a 5Ghz Core2Octo processor and a RAID array of 10000RPM drives, you might be able to open that 114M file in 2 seconds with Adobe Reader. Personally, I'd rather use Xpdf (Foxit or SumatraPDF if using Windows) than spend $10000 upgrading my machine.
Re:Adobe (Score:5, Informative)
The whole point of standardization is that it doesn't matter what Adobe does. Anybody can impliment the standard without too much trouble. Though, in practice, it was a DeFacto standard anyway, and there is already a ton of software that supports PDF. I haven't used Adobe's PDF reader in years.
xpdf, kpdf, Preview.app, Foxit Reader, etc. all work and between them probably support damn near any platform you would want to use. I use Foxit on my Windows machines, and I find it to be very convenient software which is fast, light, and mostly stays out of my way.
That is pretty sensitive.... (Score:5, Funny)
It's too bad they'll be saved as PDFs, I prefer to shoot RAW.
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Re:That is pretty sensitive.... (Score:5, Informative)
yeah... what a geek (Score:3, Funny)
Re:That is pretty sensitive.... (Score:5, Informative)
It's not insane, it's just one "f-stop" more sensitive to light than ISO 16000, which is one f-stop more sensitive than ISO 8000. We've already had ISO 6400 film for decades, and right now on the market there are a couple of cameras (like the latest flagship digital SLR from Nikon) with ISO 26500. Yes, that's twenty-six thousand, five hundred. Don't ask me how or why they did it, but they did. Nothing particularly crazy about it, in fact it's a great thing for those who need to use high shutter speeds in low light and/or can't afford ultra-expensive large aperture lenses.
Within ten years we no doubt will be seeing some digital cameras with ISO 32000 or higher sensitivities. Now if they'd just do something about the extremely limited dynamic range...
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Re:That is pretty sensitive.... (Score:5, Funny)
Abstaining WITH Comments (Score:5, Funny)
"After long internal deliberation, we have arrived at an official position. We don't give a shit."
PDF Tainted by Shitty Adobe Reader (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:PDF Tainted by Shitty Adobe Reader (Score:5, Informative)
Re:PDF Tainted by Shitty Adobe Reader (Score:4, Funny)
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Acrobat Reader 8.x is a piece of crap.
Re:PDF Tainted by Shitty Adobe Reader (Score:4, Informative)
Another reason for bad rap- abuse of the format (Score:3, Insightful)
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Bad Number (Score:4, Funny)
GNUpdf Library (Score:3, Interesting)
-Brandon
Questions (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Is this the kind of standard that everybody can implement, or the kind of standard that will be used by PDF proponents to wave under the boss's nose and say "it's a Standard!" to get their format used over other (perhaps more open) formats?
2. Does the standard extend to all the extra that are in Acrobat Reader but not in most other PDF readers (forms, annotations, etc.)? In my experience, PDF works fine as a print representation of a document, but some people love to use it for forms that have to be filled out, or for attaching comments to a document you sent them, and this currently causes interoperability problems.
3. Why did France vote against?
In Soviet Russia (Score:3, Funny)
Actually, that would work. It becomes a PDF so people could read it.
Have we found an "in Soviet Russia" joke that doesn't work?
Russia's abstinence for Dmitry Sklyarov? (Score:3, Insightful)
He was arrested by the FBI in the US for DMCA Violation (which does not apply in Russia obviously), after Adobe complained about his production of AEBR for ElcomSoft, which cracks PDF passwords. No violation was committed on US soil.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dmitry_Sklyarov [wikipedia.org]
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Or, ya know, pay.
PDFCreator (Score:4, Informative)
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What really should happen is that another developer should make a kick ass open source cross-platform PDF viewer (AND editor for annotations, cropping, combining, extracting, converting, etc).
Unfortunately though, there are already those alternatives out there, but they mostly suck worse than Acrobat/Reader.
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Re:PDF is nice, but Acrobat ain't (Score:5, Informative)
See also iTunes and Quicktime in Windows.
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*gets modded down by ignorant Windows users*
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Re:PDF is nice, but Acrobat ain't (Score:5, Funny)
Note to Acrobat developers, if anyone asks what you do, lie. It could be me. I will fucking kill you and then skull fuck you. I will kill your fucking family and skull fuck them. I will kill your fucking pets and skull fuck them. I will burn your fucking house down and find a way to skull fuck that too. And no jury will convict, they'll wish they had gotten to you first.
Sorry. The first hundred pages of my shit list are devoted solely to Acrobat. Deep breaths, deep breaths
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Re:PDF is nice, but Acrobat ain't (Score:4, Funny)
Acrobat or Reader? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:PDF is nice, but Acrobat ain't (Score:4, Informative)
+5 for Adobe
+1 for Apple
-5 for Microsoft
-10 for Amazon (sorry Kindle, you're fucked)
Re:PDF is nice, but Acrobat ain't (Score:4, Funny)
+1 for Apple
0 for Adobe
-3 for Microsoft
-10 for Amazon (sorry Kindle, you're fucked)
Changes I made:
Adobe lost 5 points for threatening to sue Microsoft the last time Microsoft tried implementing PDF in one of their products.
Microsoft gained 2 points for the same thing, but since they're an evil company, I'm not willing to give them more points.
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(No, I don't know if PNG actually is an ISO standard. If it isn't, pretty please don't ruin my analogy by pointing out facts.)
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but until the full version of Adobe is available for free, or even less expensive, to the masses, it seems to be not quite right
Why does the full version of Adobe need to be free? There's many free utilities that create PDFs, there's multiple free APIs to manipulate PDFs. There's plenty of free, open source readers. What is it about the full version of Acrobat that's so special?
Re:Great (Score:4, Informative)
The big one is of course forms. Do any other PDF creators create PDFs with forms? Do they do it well?
I use cutePDFcreator, Foxit, and a few others but they are missing the ability to create forms. Some do it; none do it well, IMO. Without forms it's just a static document. PDF is overkill for just a portable static document. The full version of Adobe Acrobat is fantastic at creating forms. That is what makes it so special.
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[...] until the full version of Adobe is available for free, or even less expensive, to the masses, it seems to be not quite right.
The whole point of an open standard is that you're not locked into buying Acrobat (which I assume is what you meant by 'Adobe'). There are a bajillion and one PDF creators out there, many of them free. OS X can print to PDFs out-of-the-box.
Puppy on lap = typos...not illiteracy.
The puppy typed 'Adobe' at the moment you were trying to type 'Acrobat'?
Re:Great (Score:5, Interesting)
Umm, what isn't portable about PDFs?
First, I assume you're talking about Adobe Acrobat, since Adobe is a company, not a product. The whole point of standards is that they do not rely upon any given implementation and anyone and everyone can make their own. Don't like Adobe's free product, get someone else's. I have both free and payware PDF tools from both Adobe and other companies. Do you want better free PDF tools, go ahead and code them, the standard is right there and the licensing to the patents is free. Heck there's even good set of GPL PDF libraries and code from the XPDF project.
You can make pretty small PDFs, depending upon what you put in them. Or, if you want smaller file sizes and are willing to sacrifice features, use postscript, it's been a standard for a long time.
Mail quotas are so mid 90s. Disk space is cheap and so long as you're not using Exchange (which insists on keeping sometimes hundreds of versions of the same file around, since it is too stupid to just keep one copy for everyone) it is not like attachments are much of an issue anymore.
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Uh, large file size?
"First, I assume you're talking about Adobe Acrobat, since Adobe is a company, not a product. The whole point of standards is that they do not rely upon any given implementation and anyone and everyone can make their own. Don't like Adobe's free product, get someone else's. I have both free and payware PDF tools from both Adobe and other companies. Do you want better free PDF tools, go ahead and code them, the standard is right there and the licensin
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Re:Great (Score:5, Informative)
That seems pretty decent.
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I just made a randomly generated pdf [exstatic.org] using a Lorum Ipsum generator and copy and paste.
278 page, 1.1 MB. Looks the same on my Mac as it does on a Linux machine as it does on Windows machine as it does on a reader that supports PDF as it does on the printer.
That's why.
Re:PDF makes Baby Jesus cry (Score:4, Insightful)
Ummm, I think it's called "Fit Page Width" in Evince. Oh, Reflow? PDF is meant to retain document formatting. It works perfectly for desktop publishing attempts.
Word processing programs aren't for desktop publishing, but most WP programs continue to try to get pixel-perfect formatting. This is the largest complaint I get from reviews of OpenOffice.org -- that it doesn't keep the same exact document formatting that the MS Word version of the document had. The mentality confuses me no end.
Lyx and pdflatex all the way, babe!
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misunderstanding of OOXML issue (Score:5, Informative)
The PDF specification is being approved by subcommittee 2 of technical committee 171. It has nothing to do with JTC1 and surely has nothing to do with SC34 of JTC1.
It's one thing for the average person to have no idea how ISO or IEC works, and to think the OOXML issue affects all of ISO, and to have no idea that IEC is just as affected by the OOXML issue as ISO is, but any respectable journalist should do some research and try to understand what they're reporting on.
The Inquirer should be ashamed to be associated with such bad reporting.