Is the Amyuni PDF creator no longer available from the epoline website? If so, are there any recommendations regarding alternative software - open source software would be nice - to create the files for EOLFV4? I want to avoid buying full versions of acrobat for the clerks for cost reasons also said package is somewhat out of scale just for creating PDFs.
Any experience with ghostscript driven software like Bullzip?
Regards,
PDF creation (Amyuni gone?)
Re: PDF creation (Amyuni gone?)
Please contact the procedural and technical support who would
help you acquire the Amyuni PDF converter software. For licensing
reasons, we are unable to make directly available from our website.
Martin Adu
Installations
help you acquire the Amyuni PDF converter software. For licensing
reasons, we are unable to make directly available from our website.
Martin Adu
Installations
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- Posts: 70
- Joined: Thu Jan 29, 2009 2:14 pm
Re: PDF creation (Amyuni gone?)
Please keep in mind that the confidentiality of the document you submit to services such as http://www.freepdfconvert.com is not guaranteed.
regards,
Dirk Van Haken
Product Manager Online Filing
EPO
Dirk Van Haken
Product Manager Online Filing
EPO
Re: PDF creation (Amyuni gone?)
You could also try the following.
http://www.foxitsoftware.com/pdf/creator/
However, as Dirk mentions keep in mind that there may be a rights issue when using free software.
http://www.foxitsoftware.com/pdf/creator/
However, as Dirk mentions keep in mind that there may be a rights issue when using free software.
New version of Amyuni. 4.5 Now available
Please contact Customer Services at support@epo.org for download link.
Also available the PDF Creator tool with more PDF manipulation possibilities
Also available the PDF Creator tool with more PDF manipulation possibilities
Re: PDF creation (Amyuni gone?)
In my experience there are several reasons to use either Amyuni or Acrobat compared to the many free PDF tools available out there, most of them are compatibility related. E.g. we recently had an application with a lot of mathematical formulas and not a single tool (e.g. Bullzip, DoPdf, FreePdf, Foxit, etc.) managed to create a 100% version from the original Winword document (created with Mathtype, btw.), only Amyuni and Acrobat 10 delivered a valid result.
Despite not being the most complex tool, I really recommend using Amyuni if you do not want to shell out the money for the Adobe program.
Also I found a nice link on the Adobe forum - originally filing with the USPTO - which is also helpful when filing with the EPO:
http://blogs.adobe.com/acrolaw/2007/11/ ... embedding/
Despite not being the most complex tool, I really recommend using Amyuni if you do not want to shell out the money for the Adobe program.
Also I found a nice link on the Adobe forum - originally filing with the USPTO - which is also helpful when filing with the EPO:
http://blogs.adobe.com/acrolaw/2007/11/ ... embedding/
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- Joined: Tue May 30, 2006 9:29 am
Re: PDF creation (Amyuni gone?)
There is still a fair bit of scope for improvement with regard to the WIPO standard in this regard, e.g. it could be made mandatory to only use a fully opensource font typeface, of which there are now actually more than a few, or in a similar manner, use CML/MathML for chemical and maths representations to avoid the need to rely on proprietary, closed source or mono-OS solutions. Unfortunately, the EPO does not appear to push this aspect enough with either its partner offices in the standards development process or its software solution providers.Ckral wrote:we recently had an application with a lot of mathematical formulas and not a single tool (e.g. Bullzip, DoPdf, FreePdf, Foxit, etc.) managed to create a 100% version from the original Winword document (created with Mathtype, btw.), only Amyuni and Acrobat 10 delivered a valid result.
Despite not being the most complex tool, I really recommend using Amyuni if you do not want to shell out the money for the Adobe program.
[/quote]Ckral wrote: Also I found a nice link on the Adobe forum - originally filing with the USPTO - which is also helpful when filing with the EPO:
http://blogs.adobe.com/acrolaw/2007/11/ ... embedding/
Embedding fonts with Adobe only works if the font is licensed for embedding and subsetting, otherwise the glyphs are substituted or even refused, which can naturally be problematic when trying to create the PDF.
Alex