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Xerox DocuColor 250 Online Help Manual page 307

Xerox docucolor 250: reference guide
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Journals
Product Manuals
Direct Mail Variable Not an ideal PPR
Product Spec
Sheets
P r od u c t Na me Bo o k N am e
Parallel RIP
Applicable?
Ideal PPR candidate
Well-suited for PPR,
especially if the
journal contains
many RIP intensive
components, such
as scanned images
or photos.
Ideal PPR candidate
Producing very short
or small runs of
manuals is ideal.
The first copy will
benefit from
improved RIP
performance with
PPR, although
copies 2-N will not
be advantaged.
candidate
Does not benefit from
PPR.
Definitions:
Parallel RIP, Page Parallel RIP (PPR): The Parallel RIP option is
available for a number of DocuSP-based products. This option
uses a combination of memory, CPU, and proprietary software to
RIP complex jobs. The print job is split into segments (PPR) and
Object Caching, VI
cache Applicable?
Does not benefit from
VI Object Cache
VI caching for
journals is not usually
beneficial. The value
of caching is highest
when cached objects
are reused often.
Not an ideal VI Object
Cache candidate
Ideal VI Object Cache
candidate
While this application
is generally not well
suited to a PPR
workflow, VI Object
Caching will produce
the best results
because the number
of reusable objects is
high.
Does not benefit from
VI Object Cache
Neither PPR nor VI
Object Cache
Necessary
A single journal
with a copy count
of 5 or greater that
is not image
intensive will not
normally require
either PPR or VI
caching for
satisfactory
throughput.
A single manual
with a copy count
of 5 or greater is
not RIP intensive
will not normally
require either PPR
or VI caching for
satisfactory
throughput.
N/A
This application
normally uses
multiple copy
work; therefore,
neither PPR nor VI
caching provide
large benefits.
-7

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