Online document reviews have become a part of life for web workers creating technical documentation because they because are more economical and faster than having to fax, scan, or ship review documents around by FedEx. PDFs offer a bandwidth-friendly format for sending large documents back and forth amongst a geographically dispersed project team.
Adobe Acrobat includes a number of electronic review tools. In this post, I’m going to show how you can use them to make online editorial comments. While this post was based on Adobe Acrobat 9 Pro Extended, many of these review tools can also be found in Adobe Acrobat going back a couple of versions. Note that these tools are only available in the full version of Adobe Acrobat, not Acrobat Reader.
Comment & Markup Tools
Acrobat’s Comment & Markup tools offer a number of powerful tools for marking up PDF documents. Adobe has done a good job on the usability of these tools by including using many analogues of traditional paper-based review tools.
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Adobe Acrobat X available in SA Workgroup IT has announced the local availability of the Adobe Acrobat X software family: Acrobat X, Reader X, the Acrobat X Suite as well as a new document |
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Adobe launching new Acrobat X lineup
As a writer for my company, I use Acrobat 9 Professional every working day. Then again, I am a professional. And I will be recommending that my department
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Adobe launches Acrobat X
In Southeast Asia, the company plans to roll out academic initiatives to allow students to learn to use Acrobat, and is working with government agencies to
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Adobe Acrobat X goes beyond PDF Now, Adobe Acrobat X is taking information sharing to new heights by including all the capabilities Adobe Acrobat has always offered, |
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PhilGEPS: Gov't tool for procurement reforms and transparency IV or higher and installed with Internet Explorer or Netscape and Adobe Acrobat Reade. Are all government agencies required to use the PhilGEPS? Yes. |