<br /><br />That's what I keep some of the print-outs. (It's known as "three holes binder, or "Ring Binder"" or stuff like that in my homeland. It's my lack of vocabulary--I had to replace "Duotangs" for "Ring Binders"). It takes too much space, though.<br />PS what's a duotang??<br /><br />...<br /><br />hey listener! a duotang is a little folio/folder where students store their papers for the term...a paper cover and 3 metal prongs to hold the punched paper
<br /><br />That's what I keep some of the print-outs. (It's known as "three holes binder, or "Ring Binder"" or stuff like that in my homeland. It's my lack of vocabulary--I had to replace "Duotangs" for "Ring Binders"). It takes too much space, though.<br /><br />[/quote]<br /><br />I guess they're like binders, sort of, except binders tend to be larger and plastic with round metal rings, whereas duotangs are just very thick paper (like posterboard) and they don't have metal rings for the paper, just flexible metal strips that you stick through the holes and then fold on the other side to hold it in... does that make sense? :)[quote author=mingshey link=board=6;threadid=552;start=0#4932 date=1061903060]<br />hey listener! a duotang is a little folio/folder where students store their papers for the term...a paper cover and 3 metal prongs to hold the punched paper[/i]
<br /><br />I see now; my first guess, but I wasn't sure. I've seen the metal strips sold only separately from the paper folders.<br /><br />(Number five is my vote. Chiefly to avoid poll request each time I view this thread.I guess they're like binders, sort of, except binders tend to be larger and plastic with round metal rings, whereas duotangs are just very thick paper (like posterboard) and they don't have metal rings for the paper, just flexible metal strips that you stick through the holes and then fold on the other side to hold it in... does that make sense?
<br /><br />To use the backside when your printer doesn't have the ability,<br />and to print several pages on a side, at first <br /><br /># you print the book to a file-several pages on a side, utilizing some of the softwares that enables printing to a pdf file. there are ad-wares like pfd995. Textkit also supplies printer friendly versions of some books for two-on-one side printing-then you can skip this step.<br /># Then open the pdf file again and print even pages first -- with reversed order. (If your printer driver isn't capable of separating odd and even pages, then use ghostview to do it.)<br /># Then flip the whole stack and manual feed the printer, then print the odd pages in normal order on the backside. <br /><br />If it's not certain, do some practice before you mass-print the whole book.But I'm not sure whether my printer has that functionality. Do any of you know whether I can do that on an HP printer
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