I've found a semi-feasible solution to this problem by trying an old
hack that I used to use on Windows back in the days. You can speed up
Adobe Reader by removing some of the plugins that ship with it. I've
tried this with Acroread 8, the folder names may be different for other
versions of Reader.

1. Run "gksu nautilus /opt/Adobe/Reader8/Reader/intellinux/plug_ins" in the 
terminal
2. Move the plugins to a subfolder "plugins_disabled"

Note that this will remove functionality from Adobe Reader. Depending on
which plugins you disable, you will lose the capability to search
through a document, for example. Most features though, like the
capability to read out a document aloud, are used by very few people. So
it doesn't make sense to load all features at startup. And you can
always re-enable components by moving the plugin api-file back to the
default folder.

This solved the problem of random freezes for me. This will also make
Adobe Reader start up much faster :-)

-- 
acroread 9.3.3 sometimes fails to respond to mouse clicks
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/615771
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