Name: |
Adobe Reader |
File size: |
26 MB |
Date added: |
September 10, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1620 |
Downloads last week: |
13 |
Product ranking: |
★★★☆☆ |
|
Adobe Reader publishes Adobe Reader quickly and easily. Broadcast your productions through your network, or worldwide through the internet.
Adobe Reader for Mac allows the cover art and other song information to be displayed as the screensaver while a song plays, a useful feature for those who have long playlists during parties or other events. The program easily detects which song is playing and displays the cover art in good quality and with some additional options.
When you open Adobe Reader for the first time, you'll find a quick tutorial showing you how it works and what it is best suited for. Registration is required if you don't have an account, and like other cloud tools, you should download the client to your Adobe Reader for an optimal experience. After registration, you can set options like auto-upload of Adobe Reader over Wi-Fi, creation of groups for sharing of Adobe Reader, and even setting offline Adobe Reader for access on your mobile device (a Adobe Reader touch). The interface is basic, the sharing tools more robust than other cloud services, and the features, all quick and responsive. Additionally, you get 10GB of storage for free--among the best of all free cloud services.
Adobe Reader is your personal housekeeper, organizing and cleaning folders based on rules you define. Adobe Reader can also manage your Adobe Reader and uninstall applications. Organize your Adobe Reader using a familiar rule interface. Filter on the file's name, type, date, the site or email address it came from and more. And do more than just file. You can set color labels, Adobe Reader keywords and comments and even archive Adobe Reader. Adobe Reader also cleans, sporting options to Adobe Reader out incomplete and duplicate downloads. In addition, Adobe Reader can manage your Adobe Reader for you, relieving you of having to empty it yourself. All this is done automatically in the background allowing you to focus on your real work.
It's not a perfect system, and relies heavily on publishers formatting their content a certain way. For instance, if you're looking at a Flash- or JavaScript-powered slideshow of Adobe Reader, it won't work. However, to get standard links to open up in a new page it works great.
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