Can I upgrade my original Adobe Acrobat 3.0 with a copy of Adobe Acrobat 8.0 Standard Upgrade???

HomeAppraiser

Platinum Member
Aug 17, 2005
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I would much rather pay $99 to upgrade over $299 for an all new copy of Adobe Acrobat 8.0 Standard.

Can a version that old be upgraded?

Thanks
 

GeekDrew

Diamond Member
Jun 7, 2000
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... check the terms & conditions for Acrobat 8.0 Standard?

Out of curiosity, what do you do with Standard that Reader doesn't do?
 

AsianriceX

Golden Member
Dec 30, 2001
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From adobe's website:

"UPG from Acrobat 5.x or Acrobat 6.x or 7.x Standard"

I would say no, but it wouldn't hurt to email them and ask.
 

RichieZ

Diamond Member
Jun 1, 2000
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Originally posted by: GeekDrew
... check the terms & conditions for Acrobat 8.0 Standard?

Out of curiosity, what do you do with Standard that Reader doesn't do?

perhaps create PDFs?
 

GeekDrew

Diamond Member
Jun 7, 2000
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Originally posted by: RichieZ
Originally posted by: GeekDrew
... check the terms & conditions for Acrobat 8.0 Standard?

Out of curiosity, what do you do with Standard that Reader doesn't do?

perhaps create PDFs?

I was asking him, thanks. :|

Originally posted by: HomeAppraiser
:thumbsup:

The only reason I ask is because most people I know just use CutePDF now. :) I have a copy of Acrobat Pro (mainly for Designer) that I use frequently for designing forms... I've just personally not found much of any use for Acrobat itself; I just use Designer and CutePDF. <shrug>
 

RichieZ

Diamond Member
Jun 1, 2000
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Originally posted by: GeekDrew
Originally posted by: RichieZ
Originally posted by: GeekDrew
... check the terms & conditions for Acrobat 8.0 Standard?

Out of curiosity, what do you do with Standard that Reader doesn't do?

perhaps create PDFs?

I was asking him, thanks. :|

you're welcome, anyways i'm j/k. didn't mean the reply to come across as flippant, sorry if it was taken that way.
 

GeekDrew

Diamond Member
Jun 7, 2000
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Originally posted by: HomeAppraiser
Is that something you can set as a printer in order to create the pdf?

Yes, it is a PDF printer. CutePDF is free. In my experience, it preserves proper formatting (particularly with tables, and documents larger than 5000 pages) better than Adobe's own Acrobat PDF printer does.
 

HomeAppraiser

Platinum Member
Aug 17, 2005
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I have to print from my appraisal software and save a locked pdf. I am guessing I need the pro version to lock it?
 

HomeAppraiser

Platinum Member
Aug 17, 2005
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Nice alternatives. Anyone know who, besides the ordering number, I would call to see if they will upgrade my version 3 to version 8 for the $99 price.
 

GeekDrew

Diamond Member
Jun 7, 2000
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Originally posted by: HomeAppraiser
I have to print from my appraisal software and save a locked pdf. I am guessing I need the pro version to lock it?

Ah... no idea, as I've never needed to lock a PDF. :)
 

Lord Zado

Senior member
Jan 21, 2005
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I have Acrobat 7 Professional and CutePDF here at work. If all you do is create PDF's, then yeah CutePDF should be good enough for you. I've noticed some issues with CutePDF's interpretation of objects, but I can't remember any specific details off the top of my head. Everyone in our office has CutePDF on their machine, which is a huge life saver. At my old office, everyone came to me to make PDF's. Now they can all make them themselves.

However, if you work with PDF's in any other compacity than simply creating them, Acrobat is the way to go. Batch processing security settings, PDF optimization (huge here working at an engineering firm, shrinking the Microstation and GIS PDF's), combining multiple PDF's through Window's Explorer, etc. Can also do little things like add bookmarks to PDF's for navigation. There's really no comparison to CutePDF for anyone who does a lot of work with PDF's.
 

jlfirehawk

Senior member
Jan 10, 2005
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i know this thread is swaying from the original topic but what do you guys use to edit exsisting pdfs, I have a hard time trying to do it in Adobe standard or pro or I just have not found the right instructions for it. Especially pdfs created from our network scanners around here.
 

mcvickj

Diamond Member
Dec 13, 2001
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We have a copy of Acrobat 7.0 Professional at work. However most of the time I just use the built in PDF feature in OpenOffice. All of our computers have it installed.
 

preslove

Lifer
Sep 10, 2003
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Originally posted by: GeekDrew
Originally posted by: HomeAppraiser
Is that something you can set as a printer in order to create the pdf?

Yes, it is a PDF printer. CutePDF is free. In my experience, it preserves proper formatting (particularly with tables, and documents larger than 5000 pages) better than Adobe's own Acrobat PDF printer does.

I've also found adobe's print to pdf buggy. We have adobe pro on our work computers, but actually use cutepdf.
 

rivan

Diamond Member
Jul 8, 2003
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Originally posted by: jlcampbell
i know this thread is swaying from the original topic but what do you guys use to edit exsisting pdfs, I have a hard time trying to do it in Adobe standard or pro or I just have not found the right instructions for it. Especially pdfs created from our network scanners around here.

Acroabat isn't meant as an editing application. PDFs created via scanning will either be OCR, in which case your best bet would be to move all the type into the word processor of your choice, or raster images, which would be better edited in your image editing application of choice.
 

rivan

Diamond Member
Jul 8, 2003
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Originally posted by: preslove
Originally posted by: GeekDrew
Originally posted by: HomeAppraiser
Is that something you can set as a printer in order to create the pdf?

Yes, it is a PDF printer. CutePDF is free. In my experience, it preserves proper formatting (particularly with tables, and documents larger than 5000 pages) better than Adobe's own Acrobat PDF printer does.

I've also found adobe's print to pdf buggy. We have adobe pro on our work computers, but actually use cutepdf.

I've been using Acrobat for a decade and have never had any issues that weren't user created. Then again, less than 5% of my documents have come from anything other than Illustrator, InDesign, Quark or Photoshop.
 

Lord Zado

Senior member
Jan 21, 2005
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Originally posted by: rivan
Originally posted by: jlcampbell
i know this thread is swaying from the original topic but what do you guys use to edit exsisting pdfs, I have a hard time trying to do it in Adobe standard or pro or I just have not found the right instructions for it. Especially pdfs created from our network scanners around here.

Acroabat isn't meant as an editing application. PDFs created via scanning will either be OCR, in which case your best bet would be to move all the type into the word processor of your choice, or raster images, which would be better edited in your image editing application of choice.

Yeah PDF's aren't really meant to be editted. PDF's created in Illustrator with the Save As option can remain editable in Illustrator. You can edit text in PDF's created from word processors if the fonts are embedded using the Touch Up Text tool. You can move some objects around in Acrobat Professional depending on how the PDF was created.

Like Rivan said, if your PDF's come from a scanner, the best way to edit them is with an image program (Photoshop). Or if you need text edits, OCR the text in the PDF and copy/paste it to a word processor.
 

HomeAppraiser

Platinum Member
Aug 17, 2005
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Can the free version of CutePDF be Locked to only allow viewing and printing, and not allow coping info off the pdf pages?

Does CutePDF writer conflict with Adobe Reader 8.0?
 

GeekDrew

Diamond Member
Jun 7, 2000
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Originally posted by: HomeAppraiser
Can the free version of CutePDF be Locked to only allow viewing and printing, and not allow coping info off the pdf pages?

Does CutePDF writer conflict with Adobe Reader 8.0?

It does not conflict with Adobe Reader 8.0.

That said, the free version does not permit locking, as far as I know. Not sure about the higher versions.

Perhaps PDF Factory (or some other cheaper package) can do everything you need it to.