Adobe Acrobat 7 Pro: CD / Download
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@ajstringham said:
See, this is where you're not thinking bigger scale. We're talking about businesses. Just because your business that generates the form has Office 2013 doesn't mean the business you send it to isn't running Office 2007 or 2010.
Same with PDFs. So this argument makes no sense. You need to keep Adobe tools up to date. Any company can run current Windows readers, so that is a moot point. I think you are confused about how to read Word documents and making assumptions based on that.
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@StrongBad said:
@ajstringham said:
Also, with the fact that LibreOffice can now handle DOCX, opening a form still in Word format in that will also change the formatting.
What do you mean by "can now" edit DOCX files? LibreOffice came from OpenOffice which came from StarOffice which has been able to work in Word formats since day one in the early 1990s.
But the formatting is never 100% with LibreOffice, but that is completely irrelevant to the conversation. Why are you bringing it up? I could come up with third party PDF readers that don't render identically too.
Yes, LibreOffice could always edit .DOC, but NOT DOCX. DOCX is a more recent development, being the past year or two. Also, PDFs always render the same. Opening a PDF in Adobe, Nitro, CutePDF, or Foxit will always render the same result. Besides, PDF readers are free, and you can use a PDF reader to input into into a fillable form. There are computers at companies that don't have Word, and what happens when that happens? Now you are requiring paid software for a basic task.
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@StrongBad said:
@ajstringham said:
Still, generally formatting is more subjective in Word documents than a PDF. PDFs are more static than Word. That's why they were created.
Sure, but we are specifically discussing non-static content. Word for dynamic content, PDFs for perfectly formed finals. Forms are not really finals.
That's exactly what a form is. A form is a final template basically. The form itself rarely changes. You just give someone the form and they input their info, but the form itself isn't dynamic. The fields are, and that's where your confusion is coming in.
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@StrongBad said:
@ajstringham said:
See, this is where you're not thinking bigger scale. We're talking about businesses. Just because your business that generates the form has Office 2013 doesn't mean the business you send it to isn't running Office 2007 or 2010.
Same with PDFs. So this argument makes no sense. You need to keep Adobe tools up to date. Any company can run current Windows readers, so that is a moot point. I think you are confused about how to read Word documents and making assumptions based on that.
As a rule, people need Adobe Reader, which is free and can be kept up-to-date quite easily by any number of means, from Patch Management with GFI to Ninite. I'm not confused about how to read Word documents. There are Word DOC/DOCX reader programs, which are generally free, but they are completely static readers. They aren't like Adobe Reader.
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@ajstringham said:
Yes, LibreOffice could always edit .DOC, but NOT DOCX. DOCX is a more recent development, being the past year or two.
I think there is little point to this conversation. Obviously you are not familiar with Word and are just making things up. DOCX became the standard format of Word in 2007, that's seven years ago. Word 2007, 2010 and 2013 all had it as the primary file format. LibreOffice has had it since 2007 as well as OpenOffice added the feature sometime at or before the 3.0 release which is ancient by now. Hasn't DOCX been an old standard since long before you were in IT?
Where are you getting these ideas from?
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@ajstringham said:
Besides, PDF readers are free....
As are Word readers. This is why I think you are just making everything up to make a point that makes no sense.
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@ajstringham said:
There are computers at companies that don't have Word, and what happens when that happens?
There are computers without Reader. Lacking Reader is just as much as issue as lacking the Word Reader. Lacking Reader doesn't force you to buy Acrobat.
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@StrongBad said:
@ajstringham said:
Yes, LibreOffice could always edit .DOC, but NOT DOCX. DOCX is a more recent development, being the past year or two.
I think there is little point to this conversation. Obviously you are not familiar with Word and are just making things up. DOCX became the standard format of Word in 2007, that's seven years ago. Word 2007, 2010 and 2013 all had it as the primary file format. LibreOffice has had it since 2007 as well as OpenOffice added the feature sometime at or before the 3.0 release which is ancient by now.
Where are you getting these ideas from?
When Office 2007 hit the market, DOCX was not made the standard. That really didn't happen until Office 2010 flooded the market. LibreOffice has not really handled DOCX until more recent times, and when they first said you could open and read a DOCX, if you generated something in Word and saved it as DOCX and then opened it in LibreOffice, the formatting was all kinds of screwy.
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@StrongBad said:
@ajstringham said:
Besides, PDF readers are free....
As are Word readers. This is why I think you are just making everything up to make a point that makes no sense.
Exactly, but a Word reader and a PDF reader are not apples to apples.
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@ajstringham said:
When Office 2007 hit the market, DOCX was not made the standard.
Yes, it was. -
@ajstringham said:
Exactly, but a Word reader and a PDF reader are not apples to apples.
In what way?
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@StrongBad said:
@ajstringham said:
There are computers at companies that don't have Word, and what happens when that happens?
There are computers without Reader. Lacking Reader is just as much as issue as lacking the Word Reader. Lacking Reader doesn't force you to buy Acrobat.
No, and that's true. Most people don't need Acrobat, they need Reader. However, almost no one who needs Word could get by with Word Reader.
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@StrongBad said:
@ajstringham said:
When Office 2007 hit the market, DOCX was not made the standard.
Yes, it was.Then why was everyone still saving everything in the DOC format, even with Office 2007? Why? Because DOCX was brand new and most people weren't on Office 2007, which wasn't very popular, so for compatibility reasons people stuck with the DOC format until Office 2010 became the new standard.
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@StrongBad said:
@ajstringham said:
Exactly, but a Word reader and a PDF reader are not apples to apples.
In what way?
Because most people don't need to edit PDFs (filling a fillable PDF is not editing it) but almost everyone who needs Word needs ALL of Word, not just the reader.
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@ajstringham said:
No, and that's true. Most people don't need Acrobat, they need Reader. However, almost no one who needs Word could get by with Word Reader.
This is, again, irrelevant. Anyone who needs Word will already have it and the point is moot. Anyone who doesn't need it can get the free reader.
The only difference here between Word and PDF tools is that most people have Word and only a few need the Viewer. And few people have a PDF editor and most need the free Reader.
You are attempting misdirection to make Word look expensive when it is free or costly for reasons not relevant to the conversation. However, if most people need Word, doesn't that make it ridiculous to then pay for Acrobat to do the same job that Word already does since nearly everyone already has Word?
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@ajstringham said:
Then why was everyone still saving everything in the DOC format, even with Office 2007?
Because end users dislike change and most people were still running 2003 or earlier. So they were providing backwards compatibility.
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@ajstringham said:
Because DOCX was brand new and most people weren't on Office 2007, which wasn't very popular, so for compatibility reasons people stuck with the DOC format until Office 2010 became the new standard.
Right, but that doesn't change what Office's standard was and that it was supported outside of Word almost immediately.
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@ajstringham said:
Because most people don't need to edit PDFs (filling a fillable PDF is not editing it) but almost everyone who needs Word needs ALL of Word, not just the reader.
How is this relevant and not purely an attempt at logical misdirection? Why does this matter that Word is already prevalent? Isn't that in favor of Word, not Adobe?
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@StrongBad said:
@ajstringham said:
Because DOCX was brand new and most people weren't on Office 2007, which wasn't very popular, so for compatibility reasons people stuck with the DOC format until Office 2010 became the new standard.
Right, but that doesn't change what Office's standard was and that it was supported outside of Word almost immediately.
Far from it. I remember taking a look at LibreOffice after Office 2010 had been out for 6 months to a year, and they still didn't support DOCX. Your idea that it was supported from the gate is not correct.
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@StrongBad said:
@ajstringham said:
Because most people don't need to edit PDFs (filling a fillable PDF is not editing it) but almost everyone who needs Word needs ALL of Word, not just the reader.
How is this relevant and not purely an attempt at logical misdirection? Why does this matter that Word is already prevalent? Isn't that in favor of Word, not Adobe?
Also consider that businesses interact with people outside of other businesses, namely, consumers. There are plenty of users that don't have Word and don't know about LibreOffice. Adobe Reader is free, though. People get forms from the government or another business. They can't use Word because that assumes everyone has access to Word, which is not free. However, PDF readers are free, and easily available.