pdf

22 Jun

Scribd & Slideshare: Cool Factor But Usability Flawed

in document viewers, pdf, scribd, slideshare, usability

The first time I saw Scribd, there certainly seemed to be a cool factor in embedding a PDF in a viewer in a web page, much like placing a YouTube video on my site.

But more recently, I've come to realize how the use of Scribd and SlideShare may be more of a usability nuisance than it is worth. For instance, a few weeks ago, I was viewing the C&W Program (Final) program prior to the conference, and decided to download a copy for viewing offline on my netbook. First, I tried the download link at the top of the Scribd viewer frame, which took me here. Logging in seems a pain, so I used the Computers and Writing 2010 Program link (above the Scribd version of the document), which took me to another view of the document at the Scribd website. It was counter intuitive to do so (one would expect the same behavior), but I tried the download link there and it worked: downloading without logging in.

29 Nov

Adobe, Yahoo test running ads inside PDF documents

in adobe, pdf, yahoo

For those of you who are not too enamored of the Adobe PDF format, I'm certain this is bound to raise hackles. I can sum up my feelings about the following announcement in two expletives: Yuck! and (sigh). From Reuters,

Ads for Adobe PDF Powered by Yahoo, as the new service is known, presents publishers with an alternative to conventional subscriptions, which, if widely adopted, could open up a new model based on free, ad-supported publishing, analysts said.

The service allows publishers to generate revenue by including text-based ads linked to the specific content of an Adobe PDF page. The advertisements can only run in a side panel separated from the publication's actual content.

03 Jun

Adobe's PDF: The new "Double" Standard

in adobe, microsoft, patents, pdf

Well, I can't say I'm surprised: Adobe has decided to get ugly at Microsoft for trying to incorporate a "Save as PDF" function into its latest Office Suite. Yeah, I know for Microsoft haters this must seem like fried SPAM with honey (delicious, btw), but it just goes to show that you really can't trust any "open" standard controlled by a corporation. Adobe's attitude here is pure poison for the PDF as a universal format. I wrote about this subject in my dissertation and was lambasted for my comments about Adobe, who I warned was no more interested in "open" standards than Microsoft or Apple.