Would you mind elaborating? We rely on much of the information in that PDF to run our printer here.
Picked and paraphrased cherries…
“sRGB produces relatively flat looking colors.”
If this were true, which it is not, does Roland suggest to their users that any sRGB files are just lost to “flat looking colors?” Knowing that my sRGB files result in bright colors on different makes and models of other machines, I might conclude that Roland machines are thus inferior and cannot handle common sRGB files, so why would I bother with their brand? Their statement is incorrect as I know their machines can work produce great work with sRGB files. After all, the vast majority of all digital photos are in sRGB color space at this point in time.
Roland asserts the sRGB gamut is “relatively small,” the larger gamut Adobe 1998 “produces relatively bright images,” and Roland_SignRGB “is slightly bigger than the AdobeRGB 1998 and is designed to produce vivid and saturated colors.”
Their principle begs the question; why not just go ahead and use the common and nonproprietary ProPhoto RGB working space that has already been in use for 20 years which will surely encompass future ink sets for year to come, if not for ever?
“VersaWorks has the ability to process bitmap (Raster) and Vector data separately.”
Awesome, except their given graphic examples show Colorimetric being used for raster elements of flowers no less. Exactly the wrong photographic subject to convert using colorimetric. The setting should show Perceptual as the example for the user to be successful at printing flowers or most any other natural-world scenes and colors. Furthermore, can the option of choosing differing Matching Methods (rendering intents) between raster and vector elements present potential problems for designers and print makers? Absolutely yes, so beware.
The document has more cherries to pick but I’ll stop here.
See the attached file as a sample of flowers in ProPhoto RGB color space. Make copies by converting to AdobeRGB(1998) and another to sRGB. Do they appear different on your monitor? Try printing the 3 files. Do they appear different in print?