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PDF/VT

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PDF/E
Filename extension
.pdf
Type code'PDF ' (including a single space)
Magic number%PDF
Developed byISO
Extended fromPDF
StandardISO 16612-2

PDF/VT is an international standard published by ISO in August 2010 as ISO 16612-2.[1] It defines the use of PDF as an exchange format optimized for Variable Data Printing (VDP) and transactional printing. Built on top of PDF/X-4, it is the first VDP format which ensures modern ICC-based color management through the use of ICC Output Intents. It adds the notion of encapsulated groups of graphic objects to support optimized efficient processing for repeating text, graphic or image content. Introducing the concept of document part metadata (DPM), it enables reliable and dynamic management of pages for High Volume Transactional Output (HVTO) print data, like record selection or postage optimisaton based on metadata.

While PDF/VT-1 always consists of a self-contained file, other variants of the standard support the use of external graphic content (PDF/VT-2) as well as streaming through the use of multi-part MIME packages (PDF/VT-2s). In addition to being a digital master for VDP printing, it can be shared, viewed and interactively navigated by human operators using a normal PDF reader, though completely accurate rendering requires a PDF/X-4 or PDF/VT conforming viewer.

After several vendors had announced support for PDF/VT in 2010[2] right on the day of the standard's publication, meanwhile the first products can already be put on trial:

However it is expected that more PDF/VT tools and solutions in significant numbers will only emerge publicly towards the end of 2011, with Drupa in May 2012 potentially becoming the first industry event with a substantial number of PDF/VT offerings on display.

The ubiquity of PDF, as well as the fact that PDF itself now is an ISO standard (ISO 32000-1:2008[4]) clearly work in favor of PDF/VT. Nevertheless it is currently difficult to predict where in the industry PDF/VT will be adopted and how fast that will happen, and how it will be positioned vis-à-vis other formats and architectures for variable data printing.

References

  1. ^ "ISO 16612-2 Graphic technology -- Variable data exchange -- Part 2: Using PDF/X-4 and PDF/X-5 (PDF/VT-1 and PDF/VT-2)". ISO. 2010-08-15.
  2. ^ "Publication of PDF/VT will improve the reliability and production performance of graphically rich personalized content. Press release" (PDF). NPES. 2010-09-20.
  3. ^ "The PDF/VT Standard". pdflib.com. 2011-04-14. Retrieved 2011-07-01.
  4. ^ "ISO 32000-1:2008 - Document management — Portable document format — Part 1: PDF 1.7". ISO. 2008-07-01.