Careful, if you like photoshop at all, the tablet will become addictive.

Mike's suggestion makes sense, UPS & FedEx take electronic signatures
for deliveries. Faxing seems to be generally accepted also. On the
other hand, if I were a judge (which I'm not), I wouldn't take a
scanned or faxed signature as proof of anything, since anyone with
access to something you've signed can use the same methods to forge
documents.

I'm too used to Photoshop, and would take it over GIMP any day, sorry OSS world.

On Fri, May 15, 2009 at 3:27 PM, Mike Bigalke <mikeb2g...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Wacom tablet @ about $50 from Best Buy or wherever.  Sign the document and
> presto... email back. At least according to a college student I know.
> That's how he signs documents for his university when he's not at school.
>
>
> On Fri, May 15, 2009 at 2:21 PM, Robert Citek <robert.ci...@gmail.com>
> wrote:.
>>
>> Is there a business-accepted way to sign PDFs?
>>
>> I'm going through some "official" paperwork which an agent has sent to
>> me as PDFs.  I need to sign those PDFs and then send them back to the
>> agent.  My current process is as follows:
>>
>> 1) save PDF to file
>> 2) print file
>> 3) sign pages
>> 4) scan pages, turning them into PDFs.
>>
>> The PDF documents I get are about 50 Kbytes in size.  But the pages I
>> scan are several Mbytes in size.
>>
>> Anyone know of a solution with the following features:
>>
>> 1) keeps the size down close to the original
>> 2) avoids needlessly killing trees
>> 3) is acceptable to legal and business people
>>
>> Regards,
>> - Robert
>>
>>
>
>
> >
>

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