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Posted by dorayme on 03/05/07 22:49
In article <456f4$45ec4a13$40cba77e$13679@NAXS.COM>,
"Jonathan N. Little" <lws4art@centralva.net> wrote:
> dorayme wrote:
> > In article
> > <1173066926.621985.137140@c51g2000cwc.googlegroups.com>,
> > iain010100@yahoo.com wrote:
>
> > As for slowness, it does rather depend on how you have prepared
> > the PDF in the first place in the case of you supplying things
> > via this format. Bigness and slowness are not inherent properties
> > like say the threesomeness of a set of wickets at one end of a
> > cricket strip. It is a property that may or may not be attached
> > to this object.
> >
>
> A simple page in PDF will much larger than in HTML, unless done in MS
> Publisher! ;-)
I think PDFs, generally, will be bigger than HTMLS. But given a
client, for example, might want to be making a PDF available (to
save cost of paying for proper integration into a website and
other reasons), the client can often make PDFs smaller than they
do.
--
dorayme
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