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Rhugha
I redownloaded the file to make sure I didn't make a mistake on packing, but apparently that wasn't the probelem.
The deal:
>Detail
>You named the file with a Non-Latin 1 characters in the file name (for example, Greek, Turkish, Latin-2, Asian or Cyrillic characters) and you are opening the file on an English version of Acrobat or Adobe Reader on an English version of the OS.
>Solutions
>Do one of the following solutions:
>Solution 1: Install the Acrobat 7.0.8 update or >the Adobe Reader 7.0.8 update.
>In Acrobat or Adobe Reader, choose Help > Check For Updates Now to install the update.
>Alternately, you can download the update from the Adobe website:
>-- For Adobe Reader or Acrobat 7.x: Download the 7.0.8 update from the Adobe website at www.adobe.com/downloads/ .
>-- For Adobe Reader 6.x or earlier: Download the full installation of Adobe Reader 7.0.8 from the Adobe website at >www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html .
>Solution 2: Rename the file.
>Rename the file to use only characters in the ISO Latin-1 character set.
>Background information.
>When Acrobat 7.0.3 or earlier or Adobe Designer 7 attempt to open a PDF file with Non-Latin 1 characters in the file name (Greek, or Turkish, or Latin-2, or Cyrillic characters), the application is unable to resolve the file name properly.
>You can still open PDF files with Latin-1 extended characters in the file name or using Designer 7 to open XDP files with Non-Latin 1 characters in the file name.
(Taken from the Adobe site (FIRST site to show up in google))
TL;DR Just rename the files to something with latin characters.Even better if it's meaningfull descriptions anyway.
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