On Fri, Jun 24, 2011 at 5:27 PM, Nuno J. Silva <nunojsi...@ist.utl.pt>wrote:

> On 2011-06-24, Robert Derman wrote:
>
> > Varun Mittal wrote:
> >> I personally feel we have more important set of priorities than
> diversifying
> >> right now into PDF reader. Also no point inventing the wheel again when
> >> there are several open source pdf readers available which we can
> integrate
> >> instead of developing one of our own.
> >
> > I am wondering do any of the open source pdf readers mentioned above
> > work with Windows or are they all Linux, I mostly use Windows.  What I
> > meant by HUGE when I referred to Adobe Reader was the more than 6 Gigs
> > of hard drive space it takes up!  By contrast all of the LibreOffice
> > suite of programs takes up 475 Megs of space.  That means that a mere
> > reader takes up more than a dozen times the space of an entire office
> > suite.  If that isn't mega-bloat I don't know what is.   It has been a
> > long time, but I seem to remember Adobe Reader only taking 12 Megs of
> > space at one time.  It used to come included on almost all driver
> > disks, now it is just too big for that.
>
> Adobe Reader is the only bloated PDF reader I've seen so far, when it
> comes to runtime. Heavy, slow to launch.
>
>
> I know Evince runs in Windows, just see its download page
>

I will suggest you to investigate poppler rather than evince. Most floss pdf
viewers really are based of propper which is the native renderer for this.
Both Evince and Okular for example uses this.
http://poppler.freedesktop.org/


>
>  http://live.gnome.org/Evince/Downloads
>
> Or a direct link to the current version:
>
>
> http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/binaries/win32/evince/2.32/evince-2.32.0-144.1.msi
>
>
> Evince 2.30.3 in a Windows VM I have around takes 70.3 MiB of disk
> space. Now I guess part of that are the dependencies, libraries that are
> frequently around in GNU/Linux but must be supplied in windows.
>
> OTOH it's way lighter than Adobe Reader, and it supports more than just
> PDF (it also supports PostScript, DeJaVU and LaTeX DeVice Independent;
> it's able to handle comics packed in some compression formats ("cbr",
> "cbz" and others)).
>
>
> Coming back on-topic, there was once some talk about adding [to Evince]
> support for viewing editable documents. The following reply by a member
> of the Evince team, who says why he thinks it shouldn't be done, sounds
> interesting in the context of this thread (the one I'm replying to):
>
>
> http://mail.gnome.org/archives/desktop-devel-list/2005-April/msg00159.html
>
> There are also some comments on their wiki webpage (see the last
> section, /Possible or Planned to Support/):
>
>  http://live.gnome.org/Evince/SupportedDocumentFormats
>
>
> >> My 2 cents !
>
> My 2 cents, too. So total = 4 ;-)
>
> --
> Nuno J. Silva (aka njsg)
> gopher://sdf-eu.org/1/users/njsg
>
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-- 
*Alexandro Colorado*
*OpenOffice.org* Español
http://es.openoffice.org

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