Maybe we can get a chance to try the file with different readers and
find out what is actually happening. I've had some similar difficulties
with files sent to me to edit.
JN
On 14-03-01 06:58 PM, Charles MacDonald wrote:
On 14-02-27 09:37 PM, Alex Pilon wrote:
But do we know that it is
On 14-03-01 07:07 PM, Prof J C Nash (U30A) wrote:
Maybe we can get a chance to try the file with different readers and
find out what is actually happening. I've had some similar difficulties
with files sent to me to edit.
The file I was trying is the download off this page..
This has bitten me lately too.
Tangentially, I am sometimes able to shrink pdf's with shrinkpdf, but it
is not 100%. But that doesn't solve the password issue, which is, I
fear, an attempt by Adobe to seize a part of the common pasture by
unilaterally putting up fences.
JN
On 14-02-26 07:51
Hi Charles,
Not sure if it is something that would suit - but Chrome has it's own
built in PDF reader which I have used in the past by browsing the file
system with it. eg: On windows I would browse to
file:///C:/Users/Mark/Downloads/ and open the PDF from there. (You
could also try doing
On 14-02-27 07:47 PM, Alex Pilon wrote:
Is it some non-standard Adobe feature, or is it some standard PDF
feature not supported by whatever program you use?
I am not sure, although when I made my displeasure known, the guy says
he has used the unbreakable 256 bit encryption so that people
A web site that I often visit to get technical information has started
to use ADOBE 10 to compress the Scans of Manuals that they sell.
OCULAR asks for a password for these documents and then says it can't
open them. The Fellow behind the web site of course does not understand
why I just