Site Support

About Adobe Acrobat (PDF) Files

Get Adobe Acrobat Reader

Many of our files (including the specification sheets) are published in Adobe Acrobat PDF format. The Acrobat PDF format is designed to display in a virtual identical manner on almost all computers and operating systems. To view these files you will need to download the Adobe Acrobat Reader. This software is available from Adobe at no charge.

To print Adobe PDF files from you browser, you will need to click on the print button on the adobe Acrobat menu bar. If your printer uses paper that is different from the original Acrobat file or has dramatically different margins, then you may need to alter the page scaling options to fit each page onto your printer's paper.

Interactivity (Flash)

Most of the pages on our site use the Macromedia Flash Player Plug-in. This free plug-in is available for most web browsers. Many of our site's navigational menus utilize this technology. Please install and/or enable Macromedia Flash Player 6.0+ in your web browser.

Supported Browsers

This site has been designed and calibrated for use with Microsoft Internet Explorer for Windows and Mozilla Firefox. Although in theory, all web browsers are supposed to conform to a common set of standards, most differ from that standard to some degree (and therefore from each other). It is possible that uses of browsers other than the two mentioned above may experience accessibility problems or page rendering bugs.

9F Takakuwa Bldg, 1-18-13 Hamamatsucho, Minato-ku, Tokyo 105-0013, Japan
Telephone: 03-3438-4848, Fax: 03-3438-4844

Adobe Acrobat

The basic mission of Acrobat when it was created was to design a file that could be read and printed on any computer. In theory, the PDF (Acrobat) format is effectively independent of operating system, system fonts, and drivers. Visit the Adobe Web site for more information.

Macromedia Flash

Flash was designed to provide interactivity and animation to web pages. Programmers can complete complex applications that will run inside a web browser through the use of a program called a plug-in. When plug-ins first came out they usually required the user to manually install them. Newer browsers sport automatic installation for common plug-ins including flash. Visit the Macromedia Web site for more information.