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Pdf News & Articles
By Marisa Peacock
| Wednesday December 9, 2009
Lifecycles. They exist in just about every form, from humans to honeybees. But forget biology, let’s talk about the lifecycle of your documents.
That’s right. Everyday you create a new document, review and format it just the way you want. Then you save it as a PDF to give it that clean, polished look. But the lifecycle of the document rarely ends there. There are always revisions and edits, forcing you back into the original document to spend your valuable time fixing margins and tampering with page numbers, just to save it as a PDF again.
Consequently, very few of us would consider a PDF a working document. Until now.
By David Roe
| Wednesday November 4, 2009
In what is being described as the deepest integration with Autonomy’s (news, site) iManage document management software to date, Australian-based DocsCorp (news, site ) has announced upgrades to both its pdfDocs Desktop and pdfDocs compareDocs so that the two can be integrated into iManage out-of-the-box and without any special connectors.
Specifically targeting legal, financial and government agencies, the new integration gives users of iManage a whole pile of new PDF management features from pdfDocs Desktop including editing, file splitting, annotation and stamping.
By Marisa Peacock
| Monday June 15, 2009
A recent study has revealed that standardization is expanding. In their effort to provide technological, economic and societal benefits to enterprises that employ them, standards are becoming more mainstream throughout Europe. Specifically, the ISO 19005 standard (PDF/A), which defines requirements for creating documents suitable for archiving based on the widely available PDF format.
By James Mowery
| Friday October 10, 2008

Document management software provider eCopy has announced eCopy PaperWorks Plus. This product allows users to convert paper documents into electronic Portable Document Format (PDF) files that can be edited, searched, managed and organized. There are also some additions that make this application better suited for users looking to improve their workflows.
By Jason Harris
| Thursday October 9, 2008

What is a major problem when trying to rope data into a content management system? Trying to contain, organize and aggregate unstructured and non-standardized data is likely one of the issues on the top of any content manager’s list.
This is why RSD has announced a new product called Data2Doc that aims to bring some structure and standardization to PDF documents and other data sources. The new offering will enable customers to quickly deliver business-critical, data-rich documents quickly and easily.
By Angela Natividad
| Thursday May 31, 2007

Think of it this way: if Google Maps and Flickr “knew” each other in the Biblical sense (as far as apps can, anyway), this is what their baby would be like.
By Angela Natividad
| Tuesday May 29, 2007

For dedicated content builders who’ve always wanted to compare the kettle to the pot, Sydney-based DocsCorp releases compareDocs, an enhancement to the pdfDocs Solutions Suite.
By Jason Campbell
| Tuesday May 15, 2007

If you are looking for an alternative to Adobe Acrobat for PDF creation and manipulation, look no further. Nitro PDF Software follows up the March release of Nitro PDF Express with the release of a new version of Nitro PDF Professional.
By Cate O\'Malley
| Friday March 16, 2007
California-based Nitro PDF Software, the PDF tool vendor, has announced the release of Nitro PDF Express. A bargain basement deal that put some nifty PDF tools at your fingertips for less than US$ 50.
The software unleashes a new set of PDF tools including utilities for creation, conversion, extraction, file combination, file splitting, batch processing, and PDF security. Users can now create PDFs quickly and easily from over 200 different file types, and will have complete control over the documents’ security.
By Angela Natividad
| Tuesday February 6, 2007

Considering its notable release of Acrobat 8 just months ago, and withstanding some recent criticisms we’ve published, it’s clear Adobe is not shy about raising the bar for the next generation of document collaboration and security software.
So it comes as little surprise that this year Adobe plans to drive towards ISO standardization of its PDF specification. According to Adobe Chief Software Architect Kevin Lynch, this means PDF will evolve from de facto security standard to de jure. As, he doesn’t hesitate to add, “it should.”
By Gerry McGovern
| Monday February 5, 2007
PowerPoints are the curse of the intranet, and PDFs the curse of the Web. PDFs reflect print thinking. On the Web, we need web thinking.