This document discusses the technical process used to digitize a collection of SHOGI magazines. The magazines were scanned into a computer and then assembled into a PDF file using QuarkXpress and Adobe Acrobat. Some issues had diagrams spanning center pages, requiring extra pages like 10a to be added so these issues could be properly viewed in digital format. The quality of the digitized versions does not match that of the original print magazines.
This document discusses the technical process used to digitize a collection of SHOGI magazines. The magazines were scanned into a computer and then assembled into a PDF file using QuarkXpress and Adobe Acrobat. Some issues had diagrams spanning center pages, requiring extra pages like 10a to be added so these issues could be properly viewed in digital format. The quality of the digitized versions does not match that of the original print magazines.
This document discusses the technical process used to digitize a collection of SHOGI magazines. The magazines were scanned into a computer and then assembled into a PDF file using QuarkXpress and Adobe Acrobat. Some issues had diagrams spanning center pages, requiring extra pages like 10a to be added so these issues could be properly viewed in digital format. The quality of the digitized versions does not match that of the original print magazines.
SHOGI magazines is achieved by scanning the pages into a computer and then by the production of a QuarkXpress file, which is, in turn, then rendered into a .pdf file with the use of Adobe Acrobat. Clearly the finished product cannot hope to match the actual magazines for quality. Problems were encountered with SHOGI Issues 7, 8, 10, 11, 26 and, to a lesser extent, 34, which all have diagrams covering the middle of the centre pages. This causes a slight problem in displaying the pages in this format and is dealt with by adding an extra page 10a, as here, in each case. With Issue No. 34 pages 10 and 11 appear singly and the map diagram here is necessarily split.