https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=514222

--- Comment #2 from Alessandro Griseta <[email protected]> ---
I'd also like to point out I have tried other PDF readers before settling with
Okular, which explains why I am willing to build on Okular's solid
functionality rather than try to bring other PDF readers with more features to
be as stable as Okular. I figured out a way to add keyboard shortcuts for
colors to [pdf-tools for
Emacs](https://github.com/vedang/pdf-tools/discussions/332), but sadly the
wealth of customisation options available in `Elisp` were pointless when the
reader would crash with 100-page documents: in Okular I have heavily annotated
image-dense PDFs whilst scrolling quickly through them and the experience has
always been breathtakingly smooth on a computer as (relatively) low-power as
the Raspberry Pi 5, greatly surpassing Zotero for example (which I was also
able to crash in that scenario), from which I was able to transition despite
its useful features, as there are ways to do the same things and better with
Okular plus [searching inside PDF annotations via
CLI](https://gist.github.com/SuperCowProducts/af05f34f03197bfefc80712d96d54a1e).

I still took a very long time to start using Okular on a daily basis due to
it's Windows/Linux-only availability, although I'm excited to test it on a
mobile OS like Ubuntu Touch and make some adjustments if necessary, so that
it's usable (mainly resizing controls and making sure everything's touch
friendly, although knowing KDE is moving in that direction I should hopefully
have a headstart in that area). Once that is done, Okular should be ready to
use on any device, so long as it's running Linux.

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