English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I have created a document in Adobe Illustrator 10 with a sans serif font (Century Gothic). I am creating outlines just in case someone I send the document to is on a mac or does not have the font.

The problem is, any time I create a PDF with the eps file, THE I'S AND L'S ARE BEING BOLDED while I have not done this myself. It is driving me nuts. I have never seen this before.

Has anyone else out there ever encountered this? HOW DO I STOP THIS!?

Help!!!

2007-10-25 04:01:04 · 3 answers · asked by manhattanchicka 3 in Computers & Internet Software

3 answers

Not sure I can help but I am on a mac and I have the CS2 Illustrator, if you want to try to email me I will see if I can help.

2007-10-25 04:04:45 · answer #1 · answered by claws_4_u 4 · 0 0

Less costly is an old machine with an iptables firewall (eg. a Linux distro like IPcop). Which is better is arguable. I lean towards the Linux machine, primarily because it is generally easier to patch in the event that a vulnerability is discovered and usually such patches are available sooner than most proprietary hardware solutions. Additionally, it is more useful and configurable (has almost unlimited features) and you aren't stuck with waiting on a company to keep up to date. Some prefer hardware firewalls as they may be a little simpler to implement. One could argue that a proprietary hardware solution is more secure because the source code is secret, but this is highly debated or has been. A hardware firewall may be more suitable for high bandwidth applications as it can support higher throughput depending on its design and what computer it's compared to. A firewall should be a separate machine in any case. A desktop firewall or just running iptables or the like on the same machine used as a server or desktop is not as secure and should only be done in addition to a dedicated firewall. Edit: Most consumer routers do not contain firewalls, at best several could be consider pseudo-firewalls. Also, it is possible to attack a private network that sits behind a NAT router.

2016-05-25 19:56:19 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Try using different COMMON fonts until you find one that works for the Mac user, Times New Roman, Courier or Arial. These are nearly universal.

2007-10-26 05:34:12 · answer #3 · answered by ELfaGeek 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers