I'd be grateful for any recommendations on use of preflight to help with this scenario:
Most of our work is legal reprographics. Printing binders with tabs full of documents from external lawyers.
Often CWS will stop printing halfway through a job because it found an error in the document.
These errors are usually due to:
- scanned document contains errors in the OCR - often in a foreign language, especially Cyrillic.
- document is a scan and lawyers have added a text header over it.
- document is a weird size scan and lawyers have messed with the size of the image extending beyond the page.
Currently all I do with preflight for all documents is to scale the page to A4, before loading into total flow prep.
With some problem documents today I've used preflight to convert the page contents to a CMYK image. And I was wondering whether anyone has any ideas on how to use preflight to avoid these problems without adding on excessive processing time.
Changing the behaviour of lawyers submitting these documents is not an option btw. We have no control over that.
Most of our work is legal reprographics. Printing binders with tabs full of documents from external lawyers.
Often CWS will stop printing halfway through a job because it found an error in the document.
These errors are usually due to:
- scanned document contains errors in the OCR - often in a foreign language, especially Cyrillic.
- document is a scan and lawyers have added a text header over it.
- document is a weird size scan and lawyers have messed with the size of the image extending beyond the page.
Currently all I do with preflight for all documents is to scale the page to A4, before loading into total flow prep.
With some problem documents today I've used preflight to convert the page contents to a CMYK image. And I was wondering whether anyone has any ideas on how to use preflight to avoid these problems without adding on excessive processing time.
Changing the behaviour of lawyers submitting these documents is not an option btw. We have no control over that.