At its simplest level, the PDF is
about as close as you can get digitally to the printed page – a
universal, freely distributed medium which, once editing is complete,
can be published in a locked format and distributed without fear of
it being changed. Acrobat has long been a favourite of
graphics stables and designers, not only for its control over layout
but also over colour space and print output. Over the years, more and
more capabilities have been added to the engine and the latest
incarnation continues along these lines.
That's not to say that the interface
isn't initially user friendly - novices are greeted with a Getting
Started dialogue which guides you step by step through various common
tasks such as PDF creation, document merging, exporting, etc..
Stray away from your trusty guide
though, and you're into a haunted quagmire of toolbars, palettes and
icons. Thousands of them. With even more waiting just a click or
two in any direction. I've never seen such a mind-numbing array of
buttons. Obviously you don't have to have them all on screen at
once, but what you do have to do is remember where on earth
they all are, since Adobe have, rather bafflingly, neglected to
include the option to save your workspace. This feature, which is
available in Adobe's other flagship applications, has never been so
needed as it is here. Or isn't here, as the case may be.
Unfortunately, Adobe's constant to
drive cram more into the Acrobat package is probably its biggest
drawback. Acrobat Professional 8 lumbers like a walrus, shuddering
under the weight of all those esoteric features.
A quick search of the world wide web
will turn up many cheap or even free PDF creation applications and
plugins, each clocking in from a few hundred kilobytes to a few
megabytes. AP8 gobbles up an alarming 1 gigabyte of disk
space. That's right, 1GB! Now that's all very well since hard
drives come big and cheap these days (just like my ...snip!) ,
but the bloat doesn't stop there. I found it chugged along in fits
and starts even on a dual-core machine with 2GB of RAM, although, in
fairness, blame should probably be aimed equally at Windows Vista,
the Mr Creosote of the operating system world.
In short though, if you're a graphics
repro house then this is probably right up your street, but for the
rest of us - and those of us with ordinary machines – you're
probably better off getting a converter application or plugin.
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