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Adobe Acrobat – You're exhausting; an open-letter to Adobe

January 30, 2008 Software, Talking Points 4 Comments

Dear Adobe,

You have a lot of room to improve with your Acrobat line and I’m not even talking about the performance of the application. Sure there are alternatives out there like FoxIt reader and other open-source PDF readers/writers that can do your primary function faster while using less resources. Heck, you don’t even open DRM-protected PDFs? I have to get another Adobe product to do that? But no, I’m not even talking about the performance of your Acrobat line. I’m talking hook, line, and sinker we’ve bought the licenses for Adobe Acrobat 8 Professional. The issue is your slow installation, your eternal patching, and I wish your uninstallation. Uninstalling alone takes 20 minutes on a fully-capable Windows PC.

Installing and patching is the biggest issue. How I dread when you release a patch no matter how concerning the security flaw you are fixing! Installing and patching Adobe Acrobat 8 up to the latest version can take a good 45 minutes. I am not a pleased customer that this takes this long. I can literally watch file by file copying over with the new version. Many of these files I will never even use as the German, Japanese, Korean, and many more language help files copy at a visible rate. I should be able to select which languages are going to be used and save you the hassle (and time) of copying over language specific files. The other thing you need to learn regarding patching is something called “Comprehensive patching.” Allow somebody to install from scratch and install one recently released patch to get fully up to date. This is the current process for installing Adobe Acrobat 7 (standard or professional):

Install Adobe Acrobat 7.0
Install patch to Adobe Acrobat 7.0.5 Reboot
Install patch to Adobe Acrobat 7.0.7 Reboot
Install patch to Adobe Acrobat 7.0.8 Reboot
Install patch to Adobe Acrobat 7.0.9 Reboot

And here’s the process for Adobe Acrobat 8 (standard or professional):
Install Adobe Acrobat 8.0 Reboot
Install patch to Adobe Acrobat 8.1 Reboot
Install patch to Adobe Acrobat 8.1.1 Reboot

With such a slow install, it is quite frustrating and exhausting to sit down at a machine and have to go through this process, not to mention if I was doing a unit/department upgrade. Oh wait, I already have done several of those unit/department-wide upgrades from Acrobat 7 to Acrobat 8 Professional. Painful at the least, and this is my soured opinion of your producted before it is even launched.

I look forward to many improvements in your future. I fear that you bought Macromedia and what you will do to their products. I cringe that your improvements may come in patch form.

Thank you,
Many Concerned IT System Administrators.

Update: Yay! Acrobat 8.1.2 patch (that provides a rather significant security patch) is a 67 MB comprehensive one.


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  2. Adobe Releases Quarterly 9.4 Patch For Reader and Acrobat
  3. Adobe Reader 9.1 and Acrobat 9.1 Vulnerable to Javascript Again!
  • Louise

    Yeah, like dis guy said!!
    I have adobe reader 8.1.5, don't want to upgrade because then I'd have to upgrade my computer memory and then there will be more product upgrades etc., etc…

    My question is this: I'm definitely not computer savvy, but is this foxit reader a fairly good alternative to adobe for opening PDF files? I don't use my home computer for anything other than email and info-surfing anyway.

    Thanks for any comments/ideas and have a great day!!

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/404techsupport 404techsupport

    Hey Louise,

    Thanks for chiming in. It doesn't seem like Adobe has improved any since I wrote this article. In fact they've been pretty annoying with the patch to 9.1 and to 9.1.1 to fix javascript exploits. I think, however, that you can upgrade from 9.0 directly to 9.1.1 in a comprehensive patch.

    FoxIt Reader is definitely worth trying out. I'm using it currently and it seems to do the job. It's pretty light on resources and snappy with handling PDF files. It's free, so you should be able to easily check it out. The only thing I would say is that it, like Adobe Reader, is still not perfect. A patch recently came out for FoxIt to prevent its own javascript exploits.

    You can download it here:
    http://www.foxitsoftware.com/pdf/reader/

    The free FoxIt Reader has ads embedded in the application. Basically it's a tiny button that advertises other FoxIt products. You can disable them by going to View and unchecking Advertisements.

    Hope it helps and thanks again for the comment.

  • Rocket Rog

    Word up, dawg.

    Beating my brains against patching an AIP. The only solution I have not tried yet is to edit the msi with ORCA, then patch it. Are you kidding me?

    I love Dreamweaver. But like you I afeared that Adobe will turn it into buggy bloatware.

  • http://www.404techsupport.com/ Jason

    Rocket Rog,
    Check out this article for a guide to patching the AIP for Acrobat:
    http://www.404techsupport.com/2010/04/using-group-policy-to-deploy-adobe-acrobat-9-3-2/

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