Here is a situation that I think more and more computer users will face as time goes on.
With each incarnation of the Adobe reader it seems to get bigger and slower, with little added benefit to the user.
In consequence, word is spreading rapidly about alternative readers such as Foxit, which is not only small and fast, but offers editing features that users of the Adobe reader can only dream about.
I had long ago dumped Adobe in favor of Foxit and have been very happy with the change. It wasn't until I needed a custom search engine and discovered the very excellent Zoom, that I was forced to re-adopt The Great Red whale as a reader.
It's all to do with jumping to the search word in a PDF. What all the alternative readers really need is an Adobe compatibility mode for commandline/URL options, but the developers all seem to want to go their own proprietary way and ignore compatibility issues.
Anyway, here's a suggestion for Zoom that would allow us to defeat the problem without giving up our favorite reader for normal day-to-day use.
It would be an ideal situation to be able to specify that Zoom uses the Adobe reader if installed, regardless of what the default reader might be. It's a fairly common-sense feature when you consider that Zoom is only fully functional with the Adobe reader, and it's wrong to assume that Adobe is the only reader on the planet, when it's not even the best.
What are the chances, guys?
With each incarnation of the Adobe reader it seems to get bigger and slower, with little added benefit to the user.
In consequence, word is spreading rapidly about alternative readers such as Foxit, which is not only small and fast, but offers editing features that users of the Adobe reader can only dream about.
I had long ago dumped Adobe in favor of Foxit and have been very happy with the change. It wasn't until I needed a custom search engine and discovered the very excellent Zoom, that I was forced to re-adopt The Great Red whale as a reader.
It's all to do with jumping to the search word in a PDF. What all the alternative readers really need is an Adobe compatibility mode for commandline/URL options, but the developers all seem to want to go their own proprietary way and ignore compatibility issues.
Anyway, here's a suggestion for Zoom that would allow us to defeat the problem without giving up our favorite reader for normal day-to-day use.
It would be an ideal situation to be able to specify that Zoom uses the Adobe reader if installed, regardless of what the default reader might be. It's a fairly common-sense feature when you consider that Zoom is only fully functional with the Adobe reader, and it's wrong to assume that Adobe is the only reader on the planet, when it's not even the best.
What are the chances, guys?
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