My question possibly refers to conversion at a level lower than that of LyX, but regardless:
I often find that my supervisor, who is an avid Windows XP user, cannot view documents that I compile in LyX as PDF (this has gone on for over 2 years, PS support needs additional software for Windows). I believe he uses the latest of Adobe Acrobat Reader, but he might be on version 6, still. The PDF's that I generate appear fine in both KGhostScript and Acrobat Reader 6, as well as version 7 (both Fedora Core II and SuSE). The problems I have come across are as follows: * Images disappear arbitrarily (not all of them), sometimes re-appearing as the viewer goes from one page to another. * Document text appears 'out of boundary' completely so the body seems to have slid outside. I am somewhat worried as reviewers who receive my PDF's are more likely to be Windows users and I do not want to give them the hassle or be led to knock my head against the wall, trying to resolve Adobe's bug or, less likely, Windows bugs. I may as well point out that, at my end, I have never had any problem opening PDF's that had been originally generated under a Win32 environment. Any idea what might be causing this? How can this be avoided? I have no Windows machines to test this on and I see no reason why I should. Isn't the intention of PDF's to remain consistent across platforms (among other things)? It is not a Web page that I need test under different O/S's and browsers, so I am somewhat upset with whoever is to blame for the deficiency. To me, it's almost like an embarrassment to LaTeX when my supervisor sees corrupted PDF output. Roy -- Roy S. Schestowitz | Useless fact: Women blink twice as much as men http://Schestowitz.com | SuSE Linux | PGP-Key: 74572E8E 5:40pm up 51 days 5:54, 5 users, load average: 1.11, 0.90, 0.78