Dropbox users will be able to open,
edit, save changes to and share their PDF documents directly from Dropbox.
People
who work with or share PDF files could benefit from a new collaboration between
Adobe and file-storage site Dropbox.
A
partnership
between the two companies announced early Tuesday is geared toward letting
users of the Adobe Acrobat Reader app or the desktop version of Acrobat DC more
seamlessly work with PDFs stored in their Dropbox accounts.
The
Acrobat Reader app is available free for iOS
and Android
users and lets them view and mark up PDFs. An in-app purchase available in
either version adds the ability to create and export PDFs. Acrobat DC ("Document Cloud") is
available by subscription or on the desktop and lets people work with the same
PDFs across different devices by tapping into the cloud.
The
goal of the new process is to simplify the way people store, synchronize and
share their PDF files. By using Dropbox as a common storage area, Adobe users
can edit a PDF file using one of Adobe's apps, either on the desktop or via a
mobile device. The need for such integration is important because it lets
people use their phones and tablets to update, manage and share their files on
the go.
Adobe
has outlined how the new process works:
Through the Acrobat Reader mobile app or Acrobat DC on the desktop, people can
open, view, annotate and work with the PDF files stored in their Dropbox
account. Any changes they make to the file in the Adobe app are then
automatically saved back to Dropbox. They can then share the updated file by
creating a Dropbox link or a shared folder. Dropbox users can also open, edit,
electronically sign and save changes to PDF documents in the Adobe apps by
opening the files directly from the Dropbox
website, the Dropbox iOS app or
the Dropbox
Android app.
Folks
can currently add their Dropbox account to the latest desktop versions of the
Adobe Acrobat and Acrobat Reader desktop applications so they can open their
PDFs from Dropbox within the Adobe product. The integration
on iOS between Acrobat Reader and Dropbox will be available in the coming
months, according to Adobe. The Android and Web integrations will follow in
2016.
"This
means you can do more with your PDFs, wherever you are," Dropbox said
in a blog posted Monday. "You won't lose time waiting to get back to your
computer to redline or electronically sign a contract, or add feedback to a
design mock. And no more printing out a PDF, writing comments on it, scanning
it, and emailing it as an attachment. Instead you'll be able to open a PDF from
Dropbox and edit it using the Adobe apps, then save and share your work easily
through Dropbox."
Source | http://www.cnet.com/news/
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