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Three Free Alternatives to Adobe Reader

August 9th, 2007 @ 12:00 pm

6 Comments

Categories: Documents, Software

Tags: Adobe Systems Inc., Adobe PDF, Adobe Acrobat Reader, Rick Broida

foxit-reader.jpgAdobe seems to be following the Microsoft model of late, having turned Adobe Reader — the industry standard for viewing PDF documents — into one seriously bloated, overwrought application. After a recent hard drive reformat/reinstall, I didn’t even bother installing it. Of course, because I work with PDFs on a daily basis, I needed some kind of viewer. Here are three Adobe Reader alternatives, all of which are smaller, less intrustive, and free:

  • eXPert PDF Reader  View, print, and even modify PDF documents with this attractive, skinnable reader.
  • Foxit Reader 2.0  A freeware favorite, Foxit is small, fast, and packed with features (including a form filler and support for add-ons).
  • Sumatra PDF  They don’t come much smaller than this. Sumatra PDF doesn’t even have to be installed on your PC; it’s an 800K program that runs whenever you want to view a PDF. Granted, it’s a bit limited — you can’t search within PDFs, for instance — but it’s ideal for flash drives and users who like to run their systems lean. [via Download Squad]

What’s your preferred PDF reader? If you’ve got another program to recommend (or you want to give a little love to the above-maligned Adobe Reader), click the Comments link at the top of this post.

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  •  
    1

    naoise.gaffney@...

    08/10/07 | Report as spam

    My favourite PDF application.

    I use ScanSoft PDF Professional 4 on a daily basis. I primarily bought it to convert PDF's to Word / PPT / Excel. The one major drawback, is that it's slooooooooow when loading PDF's. Otherwise it's strongly recommended and I'm particularly fond of the ability to modify the contents (such as adding notes, stamps, modifying text, tables and pictures).

    Of the freeware versions I've tried I haven't found one I like, yet.

    Slainte!

    Naoise "Gaff" Gaffney

  •  
    2

    fowlbruce

    08/10/07 | Report as spam

    Nekulturny pdf Reder Article

    Zut! One must go track down all three sources to find they are WINDOWS only! Are you a tool of running dog Microsoft? Other people use LINUX, UNIX, or even OS. Doth not a Jew have hands? Next time at least state clearly that what you are promulgating applies to specific operating systems.

  •  
    3

    qtip101a@...

    08/10/07 | Report as spam

    i agree

    I use an Apple Mac computer and yes I tire of people and companies thinking the whole world is a clone of Microsoft. I use a Mac because I use the my computer for all my life and the built in PDF viewer called preview slamms anything. It is fast, intuitive, free and best of all it is small.

    Andrew

  •  
    4

    chuck812

    08/10/07 | Report as spam

    pdf995

    I've used a program called pdf995 alternately with Adobe. It's actually a suite of products (reader, creator, editor, encryption.) It's pretty fast. The free version is actually adware, but the ads are pretty inconspicuous. I think you can pay around $20 and get an ad-free version. (I especially like the editor. Lets you extract and combine with pdfs you already have) http://www.pdf995.com/

  •  
    5

    sdriessen

    08/10/07 | Report as spam

    Free pdf converter

    I use cutepdf. Works good enough for me.

  •  
    6

    Thad McIlroy

    08/10/07 | Report as spam

    Amusing irony

    I love it that your story about not using an Adobe product features a prominent Adobe ad...is this part of Web 2.0 :-)?

    Thad McIlroy

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