What was the best part about using Adobe Acrobat?
Adobe Acrobat is a popular online software which almost anyone who has a computer, especially those on Windows, has used before. If you've read a PDF file containing a report or an ebook Adobe is the company who originated the PDF file format so it's legendary for its popularity and usefulness in a myriad of ways. It's easy to take for granted so from anyone who has never upgraded to your Adobe Acrobat Pro, but has used your reader to open a PDF file before freely thank you Adobe. Adobe Acrobat Pro is a cool software which you can upgrade to and it's currently around fifteen dollars per month. I'm a Photoshop cloud subscriber and love how easy it is to access from the cloud. There's lots of additional functionality in the pro account compared to your basic Adobe reader. It's very useful to create guides for students or teachers, reference manuals, ebooks, infographics, reports, business plans, marketing plans and pretty much anything else you can document using text based content. Though you can import images as well, no problem.
The pro version takes it up a level with security measure you can implement so only certain parties can use the editing features so nothing can be changed by anyone but colleagues with these permissions. You can also create PDF documents much easier from multiple sources parsing them and integrating them into your document. Your dashboard and user interface are very minimalist and user friendly. There's a deceptive amount of power in your account once you explore it fully. You can do a lot more than you can with standard documents such as create certificates, or import Power Point files and turn presentations into reports, reference source material, and many other professional uses.
What would you change about your experience with Adobe Acrobat?
There's a strong set of basic functionality in Adobe Acrobat Pro but anything beyond this is quite complex. There are several tools which I will recommend an expert to guide you or simply take care of these tasks may be best. The amount of complexity possible is neatly tucked into your Tools settings where you'll find nearly thirty tools in total which you can use to work within your PDF. Several of these are very advanced which is great, just be aware of your scenario and determine what you need in order to utilize these capabilities most efficiently and therefore cost effectively. It takes a bit long for links to load in your internet browser when clicked from your PDF. I've noticed this over the last decade and have just copied and pasted it to be more efficient for a long time now. I'm interested in the OCR feature and have read that it can take a while for larger files which I've not experienced yet but am curious at what size they begin to slow it right down on my particular hardware setup.
Overall Feedback
I've written entire business plans using this tool including financial forecasts and projections. I've written marketing plans as well with integrated charts and graphs. It's very reliable too there isn't an instance I can recall of it crashing though I've noticed it can be slow to load. Many of us use Adobe Acrobat every day whether you realize it or not which says a lot about the product saturation in the market. And the upgraded version is great it has a ton of capabilities beyond the standard version and at under fifteen bucks per month for access on any device you have which is connected to the internet is very good value.