Acrobat 5 review
Verdict
Minor improvements across the board and some important behind-the-scenes advances make Acrobat 5 an even stronger publishing platform.
Review Date: 1 May 2001
Reviewed By: Tom Arah
Price when reviewed: £205 (£241 inc VAT); upgrade, £75 (£88 inc VAT)
At some time or other every computer user will have come across an Adobe Acrobat PDF (portable document format) file. The huge strength of PDF is that, using the Acrobat Reader application, anyone can view the document layout as it was designed, with all fonts and images exactly as intended. Adobe provides the basic Reader for free but, if you want to create your own PDFs and make the most of your PDF-based workflows, you'll need the full Acrobat program.
In many ways then, the real heart of Acrobat is the bundled Distiller application that takes the PostScript output from any application and converts it to PDF. Under normal circumstances, however, this entire process is invisible, hidden by the Acrobat printer driver that makes creating your PDFs as simple as selecting the Print command. As such, the visible face of the Acrobat suite is the Acrobat application itself: a glorified, value-added version of the free Reader.
With version 5, this has seen a largely cosmetic overhaul to give the program a more Microsoft Office-style feel. The biggest difference is that the previously vertical toolbar is now positioned horizontally and has been split into separate toolbars for controlling editing, commenting and so on. You can also expand drop-down buttons and drag toolbars on screen as floating palettes. The Navigation panes have also seen some minor changes, with automatic thumbnail and bookmark generation, and a redesign that's moved command icons to the top of the panes.
In keeping with the more corporate feel and focus, Acrobat 5 has been designed to work with network-deployment tools to enable customisable installation to thousands of Desktops across a network. The tight tie-in with Microsoft Office has also been deepened, so that Word users will find a new Acrobat menu providing access to a Convert to PDF command and even an option for converting and automatically emailing the resulting PDF.
Increased security
One area that's particularly important to workgroups is security, and Acrobat's existing password protection for opening and editing files has been expanded to offer far greater control. Using the new Document Security command with its Standard Security option, you can precisely control what changes are allowed, such as commenting or form filling, and also set whether printing is possible and to what quality. You can even choose between a new, industrial-strength 128-bit encryption system or the backwardly compatible 40-bit option.
Alternatively, you can decide to base your security settings on a Self-Sign Security system of digital signatures. Acrobat provides an out-of-the-box Public-Private key solution along with support for third-party certificate providers such as Entrust and VeriSign. Acrobat 5 now lets you email colleagues to exchange certificates, and these can then be used as encryption keys so that only members of the circle can open the file. For legal contracts and other sensitive business documents, the ability to tightly control who has access to a document is crucial.
Acrobat 5 also sees a significant revamp of its collaboration and review functionality. Although the existing Comments tools are left unchanged, apart from the new ability to search and filter comments, the underlying system is all new. Now, instead of passing the same file sequentially around the workgroup or having to pool comments from separate versions, it's possible to share comments on a single, centrally held master. The increase in efficiency, particularly when deadlines are tight, is enormous.
From around the web
advertisement
- Ofcom dithers over plans to tackle broadband slamming
- Data boost bolsters Vodafone revenue
- Google working on cloud storage system
- Lenovo's profit leaps 54% on market gains
- Google pays $25 for browsing data
- Foxconn hack exposes big-hitting customers
- Microsoft planning 29 February Windows 8 beta
- What's on this week's PC Pro podcast?
- Judges mulling Twitter bomber conviction
- TomTom tech to set driver insurance premiums
- Chrome's shine getting lost in translation
- BytePac: the cardboard hard disk enclosure
- How tech loosens our grip on reality
- Hokum watch: Safer Internet Day
- Why I'm deleting Adobe from my PC
- Prepare to be patronised: it's Safer Internet Day
- Dear Sony, Samsung and every other tech company in the world: stop trying to be Apple
- Will Apple's Final Cut Pro X update placate the pros?
- Smartr Contacts for iPhone review
- Switching to Office 365's Outlook Web App
- How Apple lulls Mac owners into a false sense of security
- Privacy - outdated luxury or public necessity?
- Building the bionic man
- The making of open-source software
- Top 10 stupid security stories of 2011
- 10 techs to watch in 2012
- PC Pro's favourite tech products of 2011
- 10 most read articles on PC Pro in 2011
- 50 ways to make your PC better
- A licence to print anything
- How to make Google AdWords work for your business
- The curse of sloppily written software
- Paying for your crimes with Bitcoin
- Behind the scenes: tech support for Formula 1
- The security risk of fat fingers
- Why Windows Phone 7 isn't quite ready for business
- When will Microsoft stop fiddling with Windows 8?
- Flash down the pan?
- Metro Style apps vs desktop applications
- Coping with Facebook changes
advertisement






