Sony peg-nz90 excel ffs Manual De Usuario

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Picsel Excel File Format Support 
Page 
Introduction 
On handheld computers, traditional applications typically rely on 
synchronization with a PC to convert content from the original 
document format into a simpler format used by the device.  This creates 
at least three problems.  Firstly, some visual integrity is inevitably lost in 
the conversion process from a rich format to a simpler one, resulting in 
documents that do not look exactly like the original. Secondly, the 
reliance on a PC for synchronization means that direct network access is 
difficult, and the device is severely hampered when untethered from the 
PC.  Thirdly, traditional applications take a monolithic approach, 
converting only a single format so that separate applications are needed 
for each different document type. 
 
Picsel’s ePAGE applications present a new concept in document 
viewing software.   Unlike traditional approaches, the viewer can access 
native files, so synchronisation is not necessary and files can be grabbed 
straight off PC filing systems, flash cards and networks/internet without 
the need for pre-conversion.  ePAGE deals directly with the original 
document in its native format, and aims to faithfully represent all of the 
features of the original.  Moreover, the novel software architecture 
based on Picsel’s ePAGE technology enables multiple format types to be 
richly supported in a single application. 
 
ePAGE achieves a breakthrough in its ability to interpret and render 
complex file formats.  Many apparently straightforward formats have in 
the past encountered difficulties even when used in their original 
application software on a different platform, for example when going 
from a PC to a Macintosh.  Sometimes these files assume characteristics 
of the computer on which they are used, such as the screen size or byte 
order, and such assumptions have to be unravelled when using them on 
a different device.  To compound the challenge, some formats may 
contain proprietary features which are not revealed to the public, and 
which even have been forgotten within the originating company.  
Others, such as HTML, have written standards yet are still subject to 
differing interpretations as evidenced by the varying treatment of web 
pages in proprietary browsers.