Woo, I'm scared. No really.. #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 18:05 GMT
Hope I don't catch it. Sounds naasty.
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 16:34 GMT
Use Foxit Reader, allot better than the Adobe bloatware
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 17:02 GMT
'Cos that's what I find appropriate, due to lack of bloatware. It occasionally warns "this file may container newer shinier stuff than your Acrobat can read" (paraphrased) but so far everything I've read has worked just fine.
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 18:05 GMT
Hope I don't catch it. Sounds naasty.
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 18:05 GMT
AFAIK only 7 and 8 are affected.
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 20:32 GMT
Find out where it's hiding and start stripping out the dll's one by one. It's amazing how few of them are needed to read PDFs -- and how fast Acrobat loads once it's been leaned down.
I suppose you lose some function, but I've never noticed anything.
Paris, because she's so skinny and lean.
Posted Tuesday 12th February 2008 02:30 GMT
Anyway, what happened to that mystery website exploit mentioned a few weeks back?
Posted Tuesday 12th February 2008 08:55 GMT
Foxit ftw. It has constantly amazed people when I open pdfs fast. Though, of course now I'm using KPDF, but that's a different story.
Posted Tuesday 12th February 2008 09:43 GMT
OK, so "reading PDFs" is easily done by lots of other software that's a lot leaner. But I work in publishing and there are lots of features of the PDF format that are only supported properly (or at all) by Adobe Reader, such as layers, scripting and animations. Now, these aren't necessary in many applications (a software manual is a software manual, and a form is a form) but they are extremely useful in many others. A lot of our new publishing for schools is taking advantage of these features of later PDF versions - and hence of Adobe Reader.
Adobe Reader isn't just a "PDF rasteriser", as many other programs are. It's a full PDF engine. Yes, it's big but that's because it's powerful.
(It may be bloated as well, I couldn't comment on that. But it's not all bloat by any means.)
Posted Tuesday 12th February 2008 19:04 GMT
Other annoying defences of Acrobat Reader:
It has an API, which means it's extensible. Lots of others aren't extensible. If there is one extension you need, then you're stuck with Acrobat Reader.