The online guide to print and design.
A book containing a number of scholarly essays printed in honor of an individual.
An easy to use, full-featured FTP client for the Apple Macintosh. Fetch 4.0 includes all the standard features of a modern FTP client, presented in a user interface that is straightforward and easy to use. The most important job of an FTP client is to move files, and Fetch makes this as easy as pressing the “Put…” and “Get…” buttons, or simply dragging file icons between Fetch and the Finder.
You can transfer not only files, but also entire folders and directories, with a single command. Fetch was the first MAC FTP client to support resuming downloads, and now in version 4.0 that functionality is available even if you have quit Fetch or your computer has crashed in mid-transfer.
Fetch is compatible with a wide range of FTP servers, from mainframes and high-end servers to Macintosh and Windows computers, and even servers embedded in prepress, image processing, and medical imaging systems.
An association for printing press research founded in 1955 by leading German printing press manufacturers as a non-profit organization.
Headquartered in Frankfurt, the association works to coordinate the printing press industry and research activities in the field of printing presses and processes; also works in close collaboration with the Institut für Druckmaschinen und Druckverfahren (Institute for Printing Presses and Printing Processes) in Darmstadt.
Thread-like particles used in making wood pulps.
Weight per unit length of fiber.
Refers to the alignment of the fibers in the sheet. The degree of alignment can be controlled in the paper making process.
Fiber additives such as wood chips, colored cotton fibers and colored rayon fibers used to enhance the visual appearance of a sheet. Fox River offers a wide variety of fiber-added papers.
An inexpensive paperboard made from woodpulp and generally contains waste paper. It is usually gray or brown in color. Also referred to as chipboard or cardboard.
String-like elements that are loosened from the paper fibers during the beating process. They aid in the bonding processes when paper is being manufactured.
Act of loosening the fibrillae during the mechanical process of beating the fibers in preparation for papermaking.
A particular item of information in a data record. In databases, fields are the smallest units of accessible information and records consist of one or more fields. In spreadsheets, fields are known as cells.
The size of a data field measured in number of bytes or characters.
Although there can be many additional colors, in addition to the four CMYK process printing inks, a single fifth color is the most common.
Often this is the corporate color of a company’s logo or corporate identity, which needs to be reproduced accurately.
A collection of related records, stored under a file name. A named set of records stored or processed as a unit.
The system by which data is held in a particular type of computer file.
When files are enlarged and saved on a crowded disk, that disk may no longer contain contiguous blocks of free space to hold them so they are saved as fragmented parts on separate parts of the disk which eventually slows down read-write access time of that file..
Holes punched, a specific distance from each other, into the edge of a page to allow the page to be stored in a ring binder or some other type of filing device.
A computer storage device that stores files which users on a network are linked to and have access.
To copy a file from one computer to another over a network.
A TCP/IP protocol that is commonly used for transferring files from computer to computer. FTP requires a user ID and possibly a password to gain access.
A filename extension is a suffix to the name of a computer file applied to show its format.
It is commonly used to infer information about what sort of data might be stored in the file.
The description above is meant to mostly explain the intent of filename extensions: a true definition, giving the criterion for deciding what part of the file name is its extension, belongs to the rules of the specific filesystem used; most times the extension is the substring which follows the last occurrence, if any, of the dot character (e.g. “txt” is the extension of the filename “readme.txt”, “html” the extension of “mysite.index.html”).
On filesystems on mainframe systems such as MVS, VMS, and PC systems such as CP/M and derivative systems such as Microsoft DOS, the extension is actually a separate namespace from the filename.
This is different from Unix-like operating systems, where filesystems do not actually support the notion of an extension, where a suffix is not a separate namespace, and where even having a suffix is voluntary for executables, as permissions are used to decide whether a file is executable.
Maximum width of paper that can be made on any given paper machine.
Refers to open areas of small type or halftones filling in with ink causing a blotchy looking area.
Additional light from a lamp, flash, or reflector; used to soften or fill in the shadows or dark picture areas caused by the brighter main light. Called fill-in flash when electronic flash is used.
Additives used in paper manufacturing process to fill gaps between paper fibers in order to enhance opacity, whiteness, and smoothness. Generally added to the liquid pulp mass, the most common fillers are mineral compounds such as kaolin or calcium carbonate. In finished papers, the filler content can be as high as 35 percent.
An oblong piece of wood with constant (and relatively small) cross-section, normally shaped to fit against a planed surface and most frequently profiled
A condition in which the ink fills the area between halftone dots or plugs up the type, such as in the letter “e.” Also called filling in.
A dark acetate material that has an emulsion side that is light sensitive. An image is formed on the film when exposed to light and then properly developed in a chemical.
A light coating added to paper, at the paper machine, for the purpose of improving the smoothness of some uncoated book grades.
Thickness of film. The most common gauge for graphic arts film is 0.004 inch (0.1 mm).
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