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Reduce PDF file size : free Acrobat replacement for Leopard

*Well, at least this fits my need*, which to be able to email PDFs of my iWork or Office presentations with both :
*+ acceptable quality*
*+ acceptable file size*



It uses the poorly documented Quartz filtering ability for PDFs in Preview. There are a couple of articles I found here or elsewhere on the web, but they still don't make things simple.

You can manually edit those same settings (using Colorsync Utility) but can also benefit from my trial-and-error process and directly download from my iDisk.
After download and decompressions, *simply drag the downloaded "Filters" folder to your Library folder* (inside your user folder to install it just for this user, or at the root level of your hard disk in order to install it for all users) - And if you already have such a folder, simply copy the contents of the downloaded folder into it.

*Here are the filters :*
* http://idisk.mac.com/jcolas-Public*

Feel free to use, download, copy, use the idea ... in any way you like.

*Then, in order to create a compressed PDF with decent quality :*
+ Open your existing PDF in preview, or Print any document using "Open PDF in Preview" from the PDF pop-up menu in the Print dialog
+ Choose Save As in the File Menu (pretty easy I guess), then choose PDF as format, and one of the "Reduce to XXX dpi ..." Quartz filters, and click Save.

I included 8 settings which produce increasingly large files, with increasingly better quality.
I find the 150 dpi / average JPEG compression to be quite suitable for most purposes.

I have tried (before Leopard) PDF compression software like PDFshrink but was not satisifed with the results and interface.

These filters produce much better (better being in terms of consistency, file size and quality) than the filter Apple includes with Leopard (and maybe Tiger ?).
The Apple "Reduce file size filter" scales images by 50%, with target dimensions between 128 and 512 pixels, which can give very unusable results.

The filters I use 2 two things :
+ resample images to 75, 150, 300 or 600 dpi (I do not not if there is upsampling)
+ compress the images using Jpeg compression at average or low quality
Once installed, you can visualize, edit or copy them using Colorsync Utility (in the Applications/ Utilities folder)

As an example, using a 73 MB PDF from a 55 page Powerpoint presentation, the compressed files have the following sizes :
+ 75 dpi low quality : 2.7 MB
+ 75 dpi average quality : 3.2 MB
+ 150 dpi low quality : 4.2 MB
+ 150 dpi average quality : 5.3 MB
+ 300 dpi low quality : 7.6 MB
+ 300 dpi average quality : 10.2 MB
+ 600 dpi low quality : 16.0 MB
+ 600 dpi average quality : 20.3 MB

Voilà.
I don't think I'll be using Adobe Acrobat anytime soon.

"Thanks" a lot to Adobe for not being able to have a working version of Acrobat on Leopard until next January.
I hope many people (with needs similar to mine) will discover that they don't realy need it.

And I just wonder why Apple does not include these filters in Leopard.
Is this just in order to be nice with Adobe ?

Feedback or comments greatly appreciated.

Jérôme.

MBP 17" 2.4Ghz/4GB, Mac OS X (10.5), and other Macs too

Posted on Dec 15, 2007 3:44 AM

Reply
226 replies

Mar 4, 2012 4:09 PM in response to BDAqua

hi bd. thanks.


i'm not following. i am talking about providing a specific warning to those users that may have files for which downsizing using these filters will result in trashed (i.e. all green) images in their PDF. this makes the document unusable. this was not an issue of noticeability as it totally trashed the pdf. I only caught this at the last minute after doing about 25 more PDF's and I haven't had the time to go back and finish all the rest of them. I'd like to but what are the parameters necessary to end up with a trashed pdf using this filter and/or one or another workflow.


you are saying this is not necessary because an intelligent computer user would never save over the original (or delete the original and rename the downsampled pdf with the original name)?


if this is the case it certainly does not seem like grounds for not having a warning about this bug (as it relates to this workflow with these filters) and I have a 1 TB HD and it is just not practical for me to keep /all/ the original pdf's since the whole reason for my needing to downsample them is that they are monstrously and inhumanly sized.


also, i upload pdf to ftp and to my websites all the time and the amount of effort that will be required to re-load these them with some kind of "..._150 dpi.pdf" suffix is just not realistic. re-writing them over the original and simply re-uploading them to the ftp is however in most of my workflows...


i mean, i am organizing pdf's ultimately to get them into software that organizes pdf's and keeping the original somewhere seems to me to be super impractical for anyone except a real graphic professional who works for a firm that has that sort of archival option IMO.


regards.

Mar 4, 2012 4:31 PM in response to hotwheels22

hi bd.


yeah. i think a lot of people are going to be getting bit by this trashing of the images bug.


i just scanned 8 images to TIFF using Preview at 2+/- MB per image and the pdf out of Preview is 20 MB. I have cases over here that are 100 MB. it is supposed to be a /Portable/ Document Format and there are 174 /thousand/ views of this thread.


i really think there needs to be some kind of documentation as to when you can expect (as I found) that a document is trashed by the images all turning green. i mean. i am not a genius in this area but I am going to have to use this filter a /lot/ and it would be helpful to know what i need to check in order not to expect to trash my pdf.


if it is not directly tied to the filters themselves, the use of the filter is caught up in it since using the filter could trash the document. maybe i am missing something in which case I would love to understand it better but i have definitely had a pdf get trashed using the filters while trying to downsize it.


- jon

Mar 4, 2012 6:28 PM in response to hotwheels22

Oh yes, I think a warning is in order myself, especially now that there's so many people using computers that would be better off with a TV remote, & falling for the "it just works" thing, or that "Standards" are standardly interpretated & executed.


People should be made aware that altering a file... uhhh, alters the file & likely should not be done unless you have a backup of the original, hence the suggestion to Save As... a new file... if the new one is OK, then you can git rid of the bigger one. 🙂


Personally, other than it's hazy ubiquidessnous, I've never been impressed with PDFs, far too much bloat, only a Word Doc can surpass it in that respect, if you had PageStream on a Mac, PC, Atari, or Amiga, I could send you a PGS doc fron 25 years ago of say 50K that would be 10 times that if I sent the same as a PDF, only diff is the PGS would be far easier to do what you want with it! 😉

Mar 8, 2012 7:19 PM in response to BDAqua

Hi BD.


I am not sure I am following you here but if there is a confirmed bug that irrevocably *trashes* pdf's due to some undocumented (?) circumstances it seems that it would be worthwhile to alert users who are downsampling their pdf's in a manner that can /also/ make this happen.


After all, it is not like there are 174,000 viewers of this thread because pdf's are being handled seamlessly in Mac OS.


I mean, it is one thing if we could post documentation to this thread that explains the circumstances that make this trashing of pdf's happen, but short of this I think it would be important to put together a more informal caution.


Regards.

Mar 13, 2012 1:59 AM in response to TeeGee117

Hi TeeGee.


You shoulf put the unzipped folder, called "Filters" in your "Macintosh HD/Library/" folder. If there is already a Filters folder ther, just add to it the ocntent of the unzipped downloaded folder.


Then, in Preview, you should select "Save As" and choosed PDF as a format. The filters should then be avialable.


If you use OS X 10.7, just use "Export" instead of "Save As" and it is exactly the same.


Please tell if this helped. If not, can you please tell which version of OS X you are using?


Have a nice day,


Jérôme.

Reduce PDF file size : free Acrobat replacement for Leopard

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