

- #Why use adobe acrobat pdf#
- #Why use adobe acrobat pro#
- #Why use adobe acrobat Pc#
- #Why use adobe acrobat windows#

Why don't you pre-scan the demo document? I know it's cheating, but it gives a better first impression (and, to me, it would feel reasonable if my own document took a few moments longer to process than the demo. It's much slower than google gview and scribd (but they don't allow annotations, so it's apples/oranges. Unsolicited feedback: It looks beautiful! My book publisher also used it for reviewer feedback. Legal depts we negotiated licenses with would always do it by emailing a Word doc, with its diff/review feature that looks very nice, and comments.
#Why use adobe acrobat pdf#
Adobe made the PDF spec, I like PDFs, and I want to use Adobe's software.)Ĭool concept, marking-up documents is big business.

It rasterizes things that shouldn't be rasterized and it draws lines that aren't there. (Before you say, "Use Preview!" know that I've already tried. When can I expect to open a PDF in 2 seconds or less like I could with Acrobat 3.0 on my 100MHz Pentium ten years ago? When will Acrobat actually work? Illustrator prints the same exact PDF file properly using only black ink on the same printer.Ĭan someone from Adobe explain to me why this is reasonable? I've paid Adobe thousands of dollars over the year for its products. Unrelated but equally infuriating: Acrobat insists on printing 100% black rectangles (meaning 0% C, 0% M, 0% Y, 100% K) as a mixture of C M and Y ink on my Xerox Phaser 6180MFP/N color laser printer. There's no way to clear it except by manually locating the files it uses on your filesystem and deleting them. I suspect 99.999% of Acrobat users don't even know it's there, yet every time I open a PDF, I wait for it. Some time is also spent reading and updating a local MySQL database called the "organizer." I've never used the Acrobat organizer. This makes no sense-especially because if I were to actually try to use one of those fonts not already embedded in the document by editing the file, it would re-load them all over again. According to FileMon from Microsoft, it's because Acrobat loads every single font on my system before rendering the file. (Yes, I do use them.) Adobe Acrobat routinely takes 10 to 15 minutes (I'm not exaggerating) to open up a PDF file, whether it uses 1, 2, 10, 100 or no fonts at all. What are the smart folks doing, and how can I copy them?If you fine fo.Why does Adobe Acrobat take 15 minutes to open a PDF?ĥ9 points by thinkcomp on J| hide | past | favorite | 36 comments The deployment is 50-80ish desktop workstations.
#Why use adobe acrobat Pc#
I'll be doing my first PC rollout as manager of the department this year, and I really want to get as smooth an experience as possible.
#Why use adobe acrobat pro#
#Why use adobe acrobat windows#
The "Windows cannot access the specified device, path or file" error message (and ability to successfully run the application without error as an administrator) indicates that it is a permissions issue, so why is Event Viewer indicating that it's being blocked by Windows Defender Antivirus? Users have "Read & execute" permission to both C:\Program Files (x86)\Adobe\Acrobat DC\Acrobat.exe and C:\WINDOWS\system32\msiexec.exe. So I created exclusions in our System Center Endpoint Protection client policy for that process and path (one path and one process exclusion for both directories just to be safe). I checked the Windows Defender logs in Event Viewer (Applications and Services Logs > Microsoft > Windows > Windows Defender > Operational) and I found numerous instances of this: These messages do not appear when running the application as an administrator. The application works, but it is accompanied by these two messages every time it's launched as a standard, non-administrative user: Experiencing an unusual issue with Adobe Acrobat Standard DC and Adobe Acrobat Pro DC (Adobe Acrobat Reader DC is unaffected).
