How
to Create Cheap PDFs
by: Kane Deng
*Introduction
Do you want to create your PDF ebooks? PDF is the
industry publishing standard, and most of ebook authors
are using PDF as their ebooks publishing format. But
the problem is - the commercial tools, which can be
used to create PDF documents, are very expensive,
and this is a heavy burden for most ebook authoring
starters.
Now good news is - there are a few ways to create
Adobe Acrobat PDF files without having to spend a
lot of money…
*Cheap PDF tools
Microsoft Office doesn’t come with built-in
PDF support, so if you want to convert an Office document
into PDF you have to purchase Adobe Acrobat, use an
online conversion site, or download and install a
special program or printer driver. You can learn more
about this at
http://www.aexx.net/Arcane/doctopdf/
Unlike Microsoft Office, Corel’s Word Perfect
Office DOES support PDF creation straight out of the
box. You can download a 30 day evaluation copy of
Word Perfect at
http://corel.com
Of course, what started this whole journey into PDF-land
was a desire on my part to create PDFs cheaply. So
buying a whole new office suite, even if that suite
doesn’t carry the Microsoft logo, kind of defeats
the purpose. There is a different suggestion: use
OpenOffice. OpenOffice comes with a word processor,
spreadsheet, presentation manager, and a drawing program.
The latest version of OpenOffice – OpenOffice
1.1 – even comes with PDF and Macromedia Flash
export.
Oh, and OpenOffice is completely free. You can download
it at
http://www.openoffice.org
If downloading and installing a whole new office suite
doesn’t sound too appetizing, fear not. There
are many other PDF tools we recommend!
For online document conversion (a la Adobe’s
createpdf.adobe.com), we recommend goBCL at
http://www.gobcl.com
and an entirely different Carnegie Mellon’s
TOM Server at
http://wheel.compose.cs.cmu.edu:8001/cgi-bin/browse/objweb
Both services appear to be free, but Carnegie Mellon’s
can be a bit flaky at times.
If you have Postscript files that you would like to
convert to PDFs online, we recommend PS2PDF at
http://www.ps2pdf.com/convert/index.htm
If you’d rather download and install a PDF converter
on your computer, you have a BUNCH of options. There
is a free converter called “Gymnast” at
http://www.oakworth.demon.co.uk/gymnast.htm
The registration code is in the yellow box at the
top of the page.
And, if you’re willing to ditch Windows together
[or partition your computer so that you can run multiple
operating systems], you can try Mandrake Linux 9.1,
it comes with a built-in PDF printer driver. Other
flavors of *nix may offer the same features. Check
around.
*References
Links to PDF Resources:
http://www.geeyo.com/docs/pdf_resources.html
About The Author
Kane Deng
Bring to you valuable & fresh information on Internet
business, and let you keep up with all the latest
major Net business opportunities.
http://www.geeyo.com/ezines.html
kane@geeyo.com