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Congratulations on the acceptance of your paper for publication. Please
follow the steps outlined below when formatting your file for submission to
the HICSS-36 conference.
Read the following carefully. The
quality of the finished product largely depends upon receiving your
cooperation and help at this particular stage of the publication process.
* PDF file will NOT be accepted, due to problems incurred during the past few years.
* For documents created in formats that do not embed source files, include all support files with the final manuscript in a folder. This folder must then be placed in a compressed archive for submission.
5. Fonts: Please note that New Times Roman is the preferred font. If you must use another, The following fonts are considered base fonts, and you are encouraged to limit your font selections to this list. These fonts are automatically installed with the viewing software and made available to all papers included on the published CD.
· AdobeSanMM
· AdobeSerMM
· Arial MT
· Arial MT, Italic
· Arial MT, Bold
· Arial MT, Bold Italic
· Courier
· Courier, Italic
· Courier, Bold
· Courier, Bold Italic
· Symbol
· Times New Roman PS MT
· Times New Roman PS MT, Italic
· Times New Roman PS MT, Bold
· Times New Roman PS MT, Bold Italic
· ZapfDingbats
Using these fonts will reduce the size of your converted paper as well as speed up the display and printing of your paper for the readers. Additionally using only the specified fonts provides a consistent look across to all material on the published CD. If you decide to use fonts other than “base fonts” you must submit your paper as a PostScript file with embedded fonts. The embedded fonts will be preserved during the conversion process.
6. Graphics/Images
All images must be embedded in your document or included with your submission
as individual source files.
The type of graphics you include will affect the quality and size of your paper on the electronic document disc. In general, the use of vector graphics such as those produced by most presentation and drawing packages can be used without concern and is encouraged.
· Make sure that any text in the graphic has a minimum point size of 4 points. Text below the minimum point size will not be readable in print.
§ Do not use custom halftones (photographs) and pattern fills. (In Lotus Freelance, Fill Patterns do not convert to PDF and a white solid fill is substituted.) Instead, use solid-color or grayscale fills to produce a more readable document on-screen that will also load and print significantly faster. This is especially important for charts and graphs.
§ Do not select “Smooth Graphics”. This option often produces extremely large files that will take a long time to display and print. The Smooth Graphics option is usually found in the Page Setup Dialog box in Macintosh applications and some Windows applications.
If your paper contains
many large images they will be down-sampled to reduce their size during the
conversion process. However
the automated process used will not always produce the best image, and you are
encouraged to perform this yourself on an image by image basis.
The use of bitmapped images such as those produced when a photograph is scanned require significant storage space and must be used with care. Bitmap graphics store an image as a series of numbers that represent the color of each dot in the image. Increasing the size, resolution (dots per inch), or number of colors in an image will dramatically increase the size of the image.
Suggestions for improving the quality bitmap graphics include:
· In general, bitmapped images should be limited to no more than 256 (8 bit) color/gray scale, 150 dots per inch, and should be kept as small as possible.
· Reduce the number of display colors before making screen shots. The majority of computer applications use less than 16 colors for their menus, dialogs etc.
· Select higher resolutions only for images that a reader will magnify. Image resolution of bitmapped images does not increase when readers zoom in on an image.
7.
Main
Title.
a. Center the title 1-3/8 inches (3.49 cm) from the top edge of the first page.
b. The title should be in Times 14-point, boldface type. Leave two blank lines after the title.
c. Capitalize the first letter of nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs; do not capitalize articles, coordinate conjunctions, or prepositions (unless the title begins with such a word).
Ø
PRODUCING
YOUR PAPER
Acceptable
Formats:
Papers can be submitted in
* [see Generating PostScript ]. Authors submitting Postscript should also include their source (native) file as well.
* For documents created in formats that do not embed source files, include all support files with the final manuscript in a folder. This folder must then be placed in a compressed archive for submission.
Using
LaTeX
LaTeX Macros can be found at latexmacros.doc
Documents converted from the TeX typesetting language into PostScript or PDF files usually contain fixed-resolution bitmap fonts that do not print or display well on a variety of printer and computer screens. Although Adobe Acrobat Distiller will convert a PostScript language file with bitmapped fonts (level 3) into PDF, these fonts display slowly and do not render well on screen in the resulting PDF file. But, if you use Type 1 versions of the fonts you will get a compact file format that delivers the optimal font quality when used with any display screen, zoom mode, or printer resolution.
Using Type 1 fonts with DVIPS
When using LaTeX, only embedded fonts should be used to ensure a decent
conversion to PDF. Use of Times fonts
is highly recommended for consistency and readability both on screen and in
print.
With LaTeX2e use the command
\usepackage{times}
and with LaTeX 2.09 use the command
\documentstyle[times]{...}
Submissions should include all LaTeX files, the Postscript output. If you are unable to submit your paper in any of the electronic formats, or if we encounter problems converting your electronic submission, your paper will be scanned and converted to PDF for inclusion on the CD. Although a scanned paper looks identical to the original when printed, it is slower and more difficult to view on screen. If you do plan to deliver your paper by hard copy avoid typefaces smaller than 11 points.
If an author does not have Type 1 fonts available, the following instructions should be used :
Almost all applications/systems can produce a suitable PostScript file. PS files may be generated in a wide variety of ways. In all cases, the quality of your PostScript file will have a direct impact on the quality of the converted file. A high quality PS file is one that reliably produces pages with the desired look, as efficiently as possible.
Please review the following suggestions for producing your PostScript file. This will ensure it is usable and presented in the manner you wish.
Ø Compressing
Your Submission
Go Back
Submitting your material is quicker and
easier if all of the files are collected into a single archive using one of
the following formats: