Although I'm certain this topic must have been addressed already, I haven't been able to locate a discussion of it.
For a long time I used 'Optimize PDF' on scanned files, primarily to orient slightly cockeyed scanned text vertically. When I upgraded from Acrobat 8 to Acrobat 9, file optimization seemed to stop working. Files would included optimized text plus skewed text. (It was though a wrinkled page had gone through a photocopier.) I've just upgraded to Acrobat X and tried optimizing a couple of scanned files with pages pages oriented slightly off the vertical. Although I'm sure optimization of some kind is occurring, the text is not reoriented--it's still slightly cockeyed. I subsequently tried optimizing the same files with Acrobat 8, and it worked like a charm!
So what's going on? Does Acrobat X do the job, but in some other way? And, if so, *what* other way? This feature was so central to my use of Acrobat in the past, that I can't imagine others wouldn't have benefited from it as well. Acrobat X help isn't helpful on the point.
Just to be clear, I want to take scanned files with slightly non-vertical text orientation and orient the text vertically ('straighten' the text). How do you do this in Acrobat X? I'm using an Intel Mac running OS X 10.6.7
Lori Kassuba is an AUC Expert and Community Manager for AcrobatUsers.com.