Adobe Pdf Reader For Mac Not Working
Hi Grace, I installed Acrobat Reader version 9.203716 on my test Mac machine (OS X El Capitan Version 10.11.6). After set the Outlook for Mac (version 15.27) as default email application, there is no issue when clicking Attach to Email in Acrobat Reader. Not only view, but print, sign, and annotate PDFs with the free Adobe Acrobat Reader DC. Only with Adobe Acrobat Reader you can view, sign, comment on, and share PDFs for free. And when you want to do more, subscribe to Acrobat Pro DC. Then you can edit, export, and send PDFs for signatures.
Google Chrome is a browser that is growing in popularity. I’ve recently switched to Chrome, myself.
Adobe Reader Will Not Open
There’s a lot to like about the Chrome browser:
- Fast
- Excellent bookmark handling
- Protected Mode (sandboxed) for more secure browsing and prevention of phishing attacks
- Built-in Google Sync to keep all your bookmarks synchronized across your computers
Chrome offers built-in basic PDF viewing and PDF conversion of web pages.
Nice as this sounds, Chrome can’t display every kind of PDF. When that happens, you’ll see this message
Chrome also lacks some of Reader (and Acrobat’s) navigational features such as Previous View and Next View.
Since Chrome is growing in popularity, of late I’ve received quite a few questions about PDF in Chrome:
Install Adobe Reader For Mac
- How do I get Adobe Reader (or Acrobat) to work in Google Chrome?
- How do I turn off the Chrome PDF viewer?
- Why does Chrome make huge PDFs?
- How do I get Chrome to print PDFs as text?
In this blog article, I’ll show you how to:
- Use Adobe Reader (or Acrobat) as the default PDF Viewer in Chrome
- How to create smaller, better quality PDFs from Chrome
Turning off Chrome’s Built-in PDF Viewer and using Adobe Reader or Acrobat instead
To turn off the Chrome PDF viewer, follow these steps:
- Install Adobe Reader or Adobe Acrobat if it is not already installed
- Open Google Chrome
- In the address bar, type . . .
about:plugins
(that’s the word about a colon (:), then plugins - The Plug-ins Tab will open
- Scroll down until you see either Adobe Acrobat or Reader.
Click the Enable link - Close the Plug-ins tab and restart Chrome.
Better PDF Printing from Chrome
Chrome has some nice printing features such as a built-in page preview and an ink-saving black and white option.
Unfortunately, Chrome creates huge PDFs. In my testing on this page of my blog, the file size difference was astounding:
- Chrome-generated PDF: 11.8 MB
- Acrobat-generated PDF: 953K
On some web pages, Chrome also rasterizes the text creating image-only PDFs. This was always the case in previous versions of Chrome, but it appears to be fixed in the Chrome version I tested (15.0.874.121 m).
If you have Acrobat installed, you can instead print a compact 'electronic' PDF with searchable text.
Here’s how:
- In Chrome, go to the web page you want to print
- Type CTRL-P to open the Chrome print preview window
- I the lower left corner of the window, click 'Print using system dialog'
- In the Print window, choose the AdobePDF print driver, then click the Print button.
What’s the difference?
I’ve highlighted the differences below, but in a nutshell:
- The Chrome PDF is more than ten times bigger
- The Chrome PDF isn’t searchable
- You can’t select text in the Chome-generated PDF
- View quality is impacted
Chrome Page printed with Acrobat |
953K |
File Preview at 400% |
Adobe Reader isn’t just unnecessary – it has a history of being an application you wouldn’t want on your system. From being extremely heavy and slow to having a long series of security flaws, Adobe Reader has never been a very good application for the average user. Adobe Reader’s speed and security have improved recentlyAdobe Reader X Adds Protected Mode for Windows Users, Android Gets New Features [News]Adobe Reader X Adds Protected Mode for Windows Users, Android Gets New Features [News]Read More, but they haven’t improved enough.
You probably don’t need Adobe Acrobat Reader installed at all. In 2017, it is highly likely your browser or operating system (OS) already has built-in PDF support.
A few people will appreciate some of Adobe Reader’s lesser-used features, such as the ability to digitally sign documents. However, Adobe Reader arguably has too many features. Features like allowing PDFs to run JavaScript code have unsurprisingly led to security holes in the past, and it’s clear that most people would be better off with a faster, minimal, more secure PDF reader.
Google Chrome
Google Chrome has an integrated PDF viewer. It has been bundled with Google Chrome since 2010. It makes opening online PDFs extremely quick, loading directly in your browser. Unfortunately, Chrome’s PDF viewer doesn’t have many features. Or rather, it has basically none, unless rotating your PDFs is an absolute necessity.
However, it is fast. Additionally, Google Chrome is now the most popular browser around the globe, so there is a good chance you already have it installed. Google Chrome can function as your default local PDF viewer, too. Right-click your PDF, and select Properties. Select Change, followed by Google Chrome. Then select Apply.
Please note that this process is the same for Firefox, Microsoft Edge, or any other PDF viewer you’d like to use as default.
Firefox
Like Google Chrome, Firefox has an integrated PDF viewer. In fact, Mozilla has bundled a PDF viewer since Firefox 19 – we’re now using Firefox 51. Who said Mozilla isn’t innovative?! Despite being eons ahead of Google Chrome, Firefox’s PDF viewer offers an equally minute number of features.
Firefox’s PDF viewer actually isn’t a browser plug-in at all. It’s written in JavaScript, the same scripting language used by web pages in your browser. This means that Firefox’s PDF viewer is fully sandboxed the same way web pages are, which gives you additional security benefits. When you use a plug-in like Adobe Acrobat, your browser’s built-in security doesn’t necessarily apply – you’re relying on the plug-in’s developers instead.
Windows
Microsoft didn’t introduce an integrated PDF reader until Windows 8. Reader is still available for Windows 10, but it is a Modern app. And there is another option. Let’s take a quick look at both.
Reader
Reader is no longer bundled with your Windows installation. However, it is fast, free, and can display two pages at a time. Reader opens your PDFs within your native Windows environment, without a browser. Other than that, Reader offers the same functionality as Chrome and Firefox.
Microsoft Edge
Windows 10’s native browser5 Reasons Why You Shouldn't Switch to Microsoft Edge Yet5 Reasons Why You Shouldn't Switch to Microsoft Edge YetIs Microsoft Edge worth using while Chrome, Firefox, and Opera are still around? Is Edge good enough to be your primary browser?Read More also comes with an integrated PDF viewer. PDFs viewed while using Microsoft Edge will automatically open within the browser window, rather than opting for an external application (unless you have dictated otherwise).
In terms of features, Microsoft Edge toes the browser PDF viewer line and offers very little. Furthermore, the much-vaunted annotation featureHow to Stay Productive With Microsoft EdgeHow to Stay Productive With Microsoft EdgeMicrosoft Edge some great productivity features. From built-in tools to time-saving extensions, here are just a few than can help you stay productive.Read More doesn’t work with PDFs, which is a little odd. However, it is a somewhat handy addition for those who have made Microsoft Edge their browser of choice.
Mac, Linux, iOS, and Android
We take for granted that Adobe Reader isn’t required on other OSs. Mac users have Preview4 Best Free Mac Preview Alternatives for Reading PDFs4 Best Free Mac Preview Alternatives for Reading PDFsIf you're looking for a free Preview replacement for your PDF reading habit, here are the best free options out there.Read More. Linux distributions come bundled with Okular or Evince,7 Best Linux PDF Viewers -- And Adobe Reader Is Just One Of Them7 Best Linux PDF Viewers -- And Adobe Reader Is Just One Of ThemPDF is the filetype of choice for many forms of information on the internet. Linux hasn't always had the best support for PDF, however, times have changed. Let's look at your options!Read More depending on the environment.
Android has a built-in PDF viewer, as do iPhones and iPads. While Adobe Reader is available for all of these OSs, there isn’t really a need to download and use it. Furthermore, there are better options available for each OS.
Alternative PDF Readers for Windows
We have covered a great many PDF viewersPDF Reader vs. Browser: Which PDF Viewer Is Best for You?PDF Reader vs. Browser: Which PDF Viewer Is Best for You?A PDF reader is often one of the first tools people install on their new computer. It's not glamorous or sexy, but it's a vital tool in your productivity arsenal. Or is it?Read More and converters in recent years. Foxit Reader, Sumatra PDF, and Nitro Reader all offer well-featured free versions that should suffice for most users. They’re usually faster and more lightweight than Adobe Reader, too, losing some less-used features in favor of speed.
Alternative PDF readers have all-but closed the gap to Adobe, with many free options still offering once-premium featuresHow To Use Gmail & Google Docs Instead of Adobe ReaderHow To Use Gmail & Google Docs Instead of Adobe ReaderRead More, such as document signing. The majority of PDFs are just documents we can view — that was the original point of a PDF, after all. With that in mind, the majority of people will find the above solutions will offer a better experience.
As well as this, alternative PDF readers are also often more secure6 Light Alternatives to Open Office and PDF Files6 Light Alternatives to Open Office and PDF FilesDon't clog your system down with superfluous bulk. For the occasional viewing of PDF and Office files, you can use compact apps and you might not need any additional software at all.Read More, as security vulnerabilities found in Adobe Reader generally don’t affect these other PDF readers. Adobe Reader’s additional features add up to a bigger target for attackers to exploit.
What’s Your View?
We’ve looked at exactly why you don’t really need Adobe Reader or Acrobat any more. Also, we’ve outlined why it is no longer necessary to introduce an extra plugin to your browser. As the majority of modern browsers now feature PDF support, the majority of people can eradicate that potential security vulnerability.
What’s your favorite PDF viewer? Do you stick with the default viewer for your operating system? Or do you prefer an alternative? Let us know your thoughts below!
Adobe Acrobat Reader Free Download For Mac
Image Credit: ESB Professional via Shutterstock.com
Originally written by Chris Hoffman on 25 March, 2013.
Explore more about: Adobe Reader, PDF, PDF Editor.
This article is BULLSHIT. Adobe Reader is still NEEDED on a computer. Many websites use forms and it is VERY VERY useful to have Adobe Reader on your computer to be able to pre-fill these forms for printing or saving. This prevents having to write information out. Edge and other browsers DO NOT even acknowledge the form content when it may exists in a PDF file.
Stop buying all these bad performance claims. You'd never have Adobe Reader open as long as a browser so it won't kill your computer. Just close the damn thing after you're done. I work on computers everyday and I can tell you that most 'alternatives' listed in this article will affect your computer performance because you will be adding used memory to a browser that is most likely already open. Again, just CLOSE Adobe Reader when you are done with the PDF.The download size for Adobe Reader DC 2019 is 170MB! Amazingly bloated, wow. After compression i wouldn't be surprised if it'd be over 300MB installed. To read PDF files.
This computer already has Adobe loaded but on chrome it keeps telling that it must be installed. If you click to do so it just stops. Can this crap be stopped nightly is a pain!
Yes, I agreed. With Window 10 I believe we do not need to have Adobe Reader. Also, I am so frustrated with the way Adobe just charge to your credit without notify the customer of the charge.
After trying out many readers I settled with xodo. Does all editing, highlighting, marking, etc. Small footprint.
Sometimes we don't want to hear the loud noise of the fan because of browsers high usage of CPU. Need to just cross out the instance of the browser. Any pdf reader use a very low amount of CPU and do the job. Having a integrated pdf is also a great help while online, so every time there is an online pdf to read , no need to download it and go for the offline reader. Thanks for your article , so many people do not know about those integrated options of modern browser.
That's why I use Adobe Acrobat Professional at home and at my company. It does what other PDF programs just can't do!
I use Sumatra PDF since years without any problem. Recommended. :)
It banned in Syria and I easily get it from another source then uninstall it and never used again
Is there any internet in Syria
I've always used Adobe Reader and can't remember ever having a problem with performance, right now it pretty much opens instantly. I also wait to upgrade to the newest version until the one I'm on quits receiving security updates, still using Adobe Reader XI. The only problem I can think of is Adobe Reader preview handler and thumbnails not working properly but I fixed that years ago with 'Adobe Reader 64-bit fixes' by Leo Davidson/Pretentious Name. Haven't decided yet but once Reader XI no longer gets security updates I might upgrade to the Reader DC classic track, still up in the air on that.
In addition, a user can also highlight text, underline, use strike-through features on the text and crop PDF pages on Mac. Reader pdf for mac. This best PDF App for Mac OS High Sierra (macOS 10.14) provides you full functions for PDF editing when you need for better reading PDF on Mac (macOS 10.14 Mojave, 10.13 High Sierra, 10.12 Sierra and 10.11 El Capitan included), such as add text, images, bookmarks, etc.
One thing I wonder about, can javascript be disabled when using browser based PDF viewers? I've always had javascript disabled in Adobe Reader without any problems when viewing PDF's. Is javascript in PDF files still a security concern? Reason I ask is that in the past both Chrome and FF have had security issues with their PDF viewer and I've always wondered if that was javascript related. Just curious. I've never had the PDF viewer enabled in any browser.
PDF-Xchange for me is the best. Very lightweight and functional.
IF you need to edit a PDF acrobat is still required. I have not found a freeby that will edit a PDF.
Have played with Adobe, PDF-XChange, and Foxit for years and recently found Sumatra PDF and love it! Small, fast, and does exactly what I need and no more.
Windows 8.1
Did not install Adobe reader
Trying to go with Chrome permanently
pdf files got chrome icon as well.
If I wanted to use Windows crap and windows-related crap I would by an inferior piece of electronic trash forever known as PC's.
I use Foxit Reader as my primary PDF viewer (on both of my PC -which is super fast- and my old laptop). I like the toolbar on the bottom that appears when you pass the cursor over, and the quality is pretty decent while reading a document. I also use Chrome for online PDFs, and the default Adobe Reader app on my android smartphone.
ok. This is getting ridiculous Adobe .. The automatic installation to upgrade Acrobat Reader XI is almost HALF A GIG!
I had to take a screenshot .. https://www.dropbox.com/s/yl8bketgyo8t4ah/Adobe%20Reader%20Upgrade%20is%20almost%20half%20a%20GIG.png
Adobe, what in heaven's name are you putting into this?
Their heart and souls. ( and a good amount of incompetence).
LOL!
Not agree, i like adobe reader, its free, and easy to use
On Windows, Foxit Reader is also a good alternative. It is light and having good number of features.
Adobe reader has gotten really bloated.
I agree 100% Adobe reader has grown too big and too unsafe to use. I use Foxxit reader and love it. And now I don't have all the issues with slow running and bloat that Adobe seems not to be able to fix. Remember you can try any third party free reader and see if you like it before you remove Adobe reader. But if you try and like a third party reader DO REMOVE adobe reader as it's a real resource hog your system will love you for dropping it.
Foxit. Easy to use and beside that most of nowdays browsers have built-in pdf reader.. :) So i dont even see reason to keep adobe reader on pc.
Thank you for this piece of information. I had no idea that this was the reason I have learned to dislike reader. This has been very informative.
What do you guys think about Foxit Reader!!!
i think it is AWESOME, in a usable way it has more support in changing and editing operations. Moreover its new tab feature gives good feel and larger icons helps in good usage of the reader, it is light, multi-tabs,secure and free. it is becoming popular among pdf readers. Especially better than adobe and its non-stop updates.
What say..!!!!So Technically U r Saying I was being Trolled By Adobe from 4 years
I use PDF-XChange. Does the job MUCH BETTER than Adobe! Like the alternatives presented here. Good work Chris!
I'm using it too and it can display pdf thumbnails in explorer as preview
i have experimented with many pdf readers like nitro , sumatra and many more after uninstalling adobe reader . but i love foxit for its speed and features :) .
It is good to open PDF file direct on the screen.
I use Adobe Acrobat Pro, both at work and at home, and frankly, as much as it pains me, the tool that was built to do the job does it. Adobe Reader always struck me as a 'demo' version of Pro - intentionally slower, incapable of doing a million little things (but leaving the options in the menus!), and a few other issues. Sumatra is quick for just reading, as are a few of the other resource-light readers. But frankly, for what I need to do with PDFs (edit on the fly, occasionally create OCR-based text), I need the better tool.
Adobe updater is satan's gaming software..
FoxIt reader does everything I need.
I am convinced but adobe is my first choice because it offers more then any other readers. if not available definitely go for others. The most websites requires adobe reader only so first choose always adobe reader.
I am convinced but adobe is my first choice. if not available definitely go for others. The most websites requires adobe reader only so first choose always adobe reader.
well, i use foxit reader,its fast n uses less ram.
even chrome n firfox can be used as a pdf reader n we dnt nid to install a third party pdf reader.dat sounds great !!! well many of us dint know that..thanx a tonadobe reader works fine for me its the best and didnot face any problems with it
Adobe Reader has only given me burdens. After my first use it sent my PC to BOD. And also its slow at startup.
Reader is slow and bloated and a space-waster. Settled with SumatraPDF which gets the work done without bell and whistles. I never like PDF reader with too many toolbars. It detracts me from actually reading.
I uninstalled Adobe pdf reader 5 years ago and switched to Foxit reader. Now it is the time to remove that too. Google chrome is good enough to handle pdf related needs.
i think Its according your needs. If you just reading and use the basic tools for PDF, its okay. but there are many tools that just Adobe Reader have.
Yeah. For home users, there will be no need of Reader.
After reading this, I'll use Google Chrome!
I use Nitro (the freeware version) It supports digital signatures and more. I do keep the Adobe Reader installed and updated just in case I try to open something that Nitro can't handle, but that has been once, I think in several years.
The Firefox reader is actually more problematic for me -- it often fails to properly show PDFs (it lets me know though -- then I have to open it in Adobe Acrobat.
Have you tried Sumatra? It's lighter, though it doesn't have any feature other than letting you read PDF/EPUB/etc
I use Foxit Reader. I works very good for me.
I don't know whether to cry or celebrate. Adobe does not offer a Linux version of the Reader. I know, I will celebrate.
Being a Linux user, I use Okular which is sufficient for my use.
Thank You I just uninstall Adobe Reader after reading this it came on my new pc after all the good reviews from Foxit Reader I am installing the Foxit Reader
I use Adobe, as it is the only program with all the abilities I need in my business. I have experimented with other programs, as always end up back with Adobe. I send out a lot of PDF's for review and signature, and it is the easist to use for my clients. So I will continue to use it, while I do agree there are a lot of good options out there, just not for my business.
It is like the 'Zip' compression software, always used WinZip, until Windows integrated it in to Windows Explorer. Tried the Windows option, great for everyday use, but too many options I need are missing. So back to WinZip, as it is the familar Program and contains all I need.
Excellent commentary.I think that's it. It's needed only in business environment. For everyday PDF and ebook viewing, you don't need any of those features at all, thus negating the need of Adobe Reader.
PDF-XChange Viewer is my favourite PDF reader. It comes with a load of features for free, including highlighting and OCR. It also has a portable version and it works very well if you have a lot of RAM (it caches the PDF pages into the RAM for faster viewing).
I have used pdf Xchange viewer for some time. I find that it is much better and faster than Adobe
If you want to utilize USPS 'Click-N-Ship' label printing, you must have Adobe Reader installed. However, USPS has recently added the ability to download your label in PDF format instead of printing directly from the website, which would negate the need for the Adobe Reader requirement. However, I have found that when printing a PDF with many of these 'third-party' PDF viewers, the rendering of the printed output is not nearly the quality that I get from Adobe Reader.
I do use PDF-XChange Viewer Professional as my default viewer (as well as to create, edit, and manipulate PDF files) but must always revert to Adobe Reader when I require a high-quality printed output. I have found this issue to be the case when printing a PDF from the built-in viewers of Firefox and Google Chrome. NitroPDF and Foxit Reader also do not match Adobe Reader's font rendering, image color and quality output.
As long as high quality printed PDF output is not required, your assertion that Adobe Reader is not required is correct. However, at least in a business situation, I would always have it installed if for no other reason than for the occasion of printing a label from any of the major shipping services, Avery Design-N-Print Online, or the admittedly rare need to print a hard copy of a PDF for legal or tax reasons. If you disable the unnecessary Adobe start-up services, Adobe Reader will consume no system resources until you actually need to use it.
Foxit Reader on an old Windows computer. On Mac, Preview is not bad but not very good either. For a light weighted reader on Mac I prefer Skim, http://skim-app.sourceforge.net/
Thanks for the heads up. Just removed Adobe Reader from my computer.
Used to be, you could download a zipped version of Foxit, but they changed it, added crap I didn't need, and made it .exe only. After that, I switched to Sumatra.
I used some other brand's PDF browser, it's definitely better and makes my PC run less application like background processes
It is needed when you read a document in computer other than browser.
A very useful article..
'Why You Don't Need Adobe Reader'? More like, why I never used Adobe Reader.
Actually, we do need Adobe reader, and in Linux. The reason: none of the available pdf readers do a good enough job of printing.
As much as I dislike Adobe Reader you have to admit that it is the only reliable reader. I try not to use it but some docs simply do not show up correct in other readers (I have tried approximately 10-15 throughout the years). Accented characters, special fonts, presentations turned to pdf, mathematical expressions. That is sad as it really is a nasty beast when it comes to resources.
Funny. My Physics and Math textbooks shows up okay in Sumatra. I think that problem can be traced to how that PDF was made.
Never had a problem with Foxit Reader. In fact, other than support for plug-ins (mostly for DRM'ed documents) I can't think of anything Foxit does less well than the Adobe product, and it is much smaller and faster!
I have been using Foxit Reader for years. Also Bullzip for my PDF printer app.
Both are much faster and more secure.As linux user Evince and firefox built-in reader.
I hate Adobe reader beacuse they freeze whenever i open any pdf
get a decent pc then..Adobe has never ever caused me any issues security or speed. This sounds like yet another attempt to have a go at something perfectly harmless tat's been around for years and it's free!!!!!!!! Has there been any testing on the integrated so called pdf readers???? I doubt it, and they're probably more likely to cause a problem than Adobe!!!
No. Any alternative PDF readers I've used over the years caused exactly no problem at all, while Reader constantly froze when opening anything over a hundred pages.
It's free, but it's definitely not harmless. Security holes are found every so often, and it eats more resource than a reader should.
I completely disagree when you tell someone to upgrade their PC just to run a reader software. It's hardly necessary.Firstly I didn't suggest getting a decent pc to just read Adobe pdfs. What I really meant was that if your pc is struggling with something like Adobe reader, then you really could do with either someone checking your pc and or upgrading as all my pcs I have ever had (and I've built many) have never ever had trouble with Adobe reader. I just checked how many pages my current pc will load and how long, it was a car manual with 375 pages and loaded completely within less than 2 seconds. Now that's my experience with Adobe and I just did a search on the net to see if there are any posts like this, guess what not a single one. Please will sites like this stop rubishing perfectly good software!!!!!!!!!!
adobe reader? kidding me last i used it at 2010, and after that i prefer use foxit reader because its light and fast, adobe reader for me is some kind of joke software with lot security issue and using so much memory and ram.. XD
Foxit reader
I've used foxit reader for a few months now and find it works great.Not a problem.
Foxit, all the way
Just don't forget that Adobe Reader has lot more to offer than other PDF readers. Adobe's software is not just a dumb reader. It can even fill questionnaires in PDF's. It allows interactive content on PDF's. I've seen a demo of it some time ago by an Adobe specialist and I've even no idea it could do such things.
'Just don’t forget that Adobe Reader has lot more to offer than other PDF readers. '
I agree. It does offer lot more security holes than other PDF readers. That alone makes it unfit for use, no matter what other features it might offer.
more features lead to more bloat and security holes :)
True, but Foxit Reader can be used to fill out forms and even to type over existing PDFs (great for those forms that were not designed to be interactive, i.e. you're supposed to print them out and fill them in by hand!).
This is true, adobe reader hugs too much space on computers. there are light weight alternatives and the above options are great.
Love the new built-in reader in Firefox 19.
I have tried to use alternative PDF readers and in most cases I have done this successfully, but occasionally I will meet a web site that will insist that Adobe Reader be used to open the PDF file. Personally, I can usually work around that requirement, but I have users that would be quite frustrated if they had another reader installed. So I still put it on user machines, even though I really prefer PDF XChange reader. I also like Sumatra reader, but it tends to be light on features.
Quite the contrary, as I picked Sumatra as my primary reader because it doesn't have bell-and-whistles. Tried PDF X-Change before, but there are so many features and I don't like the busy toolbars.
What about 'Nitro Reader'? That's a great one too!
Yes. I have that as my secondary PDF reader, although if you just want to read the PDF (no annotations, no this-or-that) SumatraPDF does the job.
Foxit reader, hands down, the fastest and the safest pdf reader.
I'm using Adobe Reader because we're required by the company to install it on every workstation.
Are there any security flaws for the other PDF readers? Or they're just as vulnerable?
There are security vulnerabilities in pretty much *any* software. I use Foxit Reader and there have seen a number of security patches over the years. However, the number and seriousness of those is far less than in Adobe Reader.
I see. Thanks for the info.
What the heck is the reason for that requirement? Can't the company do a bulk-license on Pro? That's what they did at my office; got like 50 licenses cheaper than 1 personal.
When I installed the adobe reader app, it didn't require any licensing info so I think this app is free.
I quite agree. I use Adobe at work only because it is there, but personally have used Foxit for years.
agree, adobe reader is just too much in using the ram.. i prefer foxit reader, really fast and ram friendly..
So, we can jsut pull Adobe Reader off our comp if we use Firefox exclusively? sounds good to me!
I fully just did this after making Google Chrome my default PDF handler. :)
To fully ditch adobe reader in favor of Firefoxes built in PDF reader, this add-on is a must: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/open-in-browser/
It lets you open every single pdf document in the browser, even those that normally force you to download them. This plugin is also very useful for things like opening .log or other non-.txt text files in browser.
I never did like Adobe Reader. When Chrome added a PDF reader (with a reasonable interface) I was elated. Same with Firefox. Adobe Reader just isn't a good piece of software, yet their other products are so good.