Adobe Acrobat Reader Dc For Mac Reviews

Adobe Acrobat Reader Dc For Mac Reviews 3,7/5 5375 reviews

Adobe Acrobat Pro DC was PCWorld Editor's Choice in 2017 and has been the choice app for reading and editing PDF since 2 decades ago. Acrobat DC allows users to do quite a variety of editing functions, both on the desktop and mobile devices. These are some of the functions available: Create and Export PDF files, store files through Adobe Document Cloud (DC) and collect electronic signatures; the Acrobat Reader DC allows users to read, print and sign PDFs as well. Acrobat Pro has an easy navigation with clear tabbed interface layout whilst the Home Tab allows for quick access to recent opened or edited files. However, the application can cost quite a bomb. Acrobat Pro DC, on the Adobe South East Asia site would demand from SGD20 per month on the subscription plan, both for MAC or PC versions. In a year you would have paid SGD240.

The Best Adobe Acrobat Alternative for Mac (macOS 10.14) and Windows. The documents created on Nitro Pro are PDF documents that can be opened from any PDF reader, and on any PDFLab is another free Adobe Acrobat alternative for Mac that permits users to divide and merge PDF files.

Free mac n64 emulator. Not a lot if you are a corporate and using Acrobat Pro for all the admins stuff in the company. Adobe Reader is free to download though. If you can afford it, then Acrobat Pro is the choice application.

On my Mac which is currently running Mojave, Acrobat Pro (trial) is running pretty slowly. It took a long time to fire up and connect to the internet. Seeing the colour wheel for a minute or two before I could start using the app is hilariously annoying. So I decided to switch and find something more affordable and fast, and as all the functions of Acrobat Pro. There is many alternatives to Acrobat Pro in the market. One of which is PDFelement 6.

You will find 2 versions on their: PDFelement and PDFelement Pro. They are all available for both Windows and Mac and have a Free Trial version each. The trial version would allow you to save all edits and files with a watermark. Both have the same functions except that the Pro version will have OCR. Currently I am testing out the trial and I am finding it pretty easy to learn and use, and it is fast.

For more review on the product - So far I have tested: 1) Conversion of files (including images) into PDFs. 2) Combining Multiple Files into a PDF. 3) Editing a PDF by adding Texts, and Image into an existing document. 4) Creating my Signature to be included in a PDF for electronic transfer later. 4) Annotating with handwritten notes. So far there was no glitches and the app ran smoothly. Once proven to be robust and reliable, I will purchase the registered version.

Here are the full list of features provided by FinancesOnline. Combining multiple files to a single PDF Here's how I used PDFelement to create a PDF document from multiple files.

But first let's explore the its UI. Virus protection for mac. Once opened, you will see the available functions clearly laid out. On the right, you will see a list of recent files. To open a file you may use the Open File. Button on the bottom left of the platform, or simple drag a file and drop it into the app. Select Combine PDF and click it with your mouse pointer.

You will see a different interface this time. As you can see, you may just drag and drop the required files into the blank space indicated. Or Click the 'Add Files' on the top left corner to find the files from your specific folders. You may also choose to click on the + sign in the center that will open a Tab menu where you can navigate to your folders.

I tried the drag and drop which to me is the quickest way. Have your files ready on an opened folder and simply drag them over. Once the files are in, Click on the blue button 'COMBINE'. For the Trial version, a pop up box will appear. Click CONTINUE or if you wish, select BUY NOW so you can save your file without the watermark.