Here’s some news to perk up your office space: Adobe has just unveiled the 11th version of Acrobat, its PDF reading and editing software, and the newest version brings a few cloud-friendly features to the mix, as well.
[aditude-amp id="flyingcarpet" targeting='{"env":"staging","page_type":"article","post_id":542223,"post_type":"story","post_chan":"none","tags":null,"ai":false,"category":"none","all_categories":"cloud,","session":"C"}']This announcement comes on the heels of the company’s big launch for Edge, a web-focused suite of development and design tools. In chats with Adobe execs last week, we learned that the company is “certainly looking at what makes sense to run in the cloud. We don’t want to make something run in the browser just because.”
The goes for Adobe’s big-ticket design software as well as for its lightweight document management tools, today’s news shows. Acrobat will now feature complete PDF editing (including image and object editing) and touch features for tablets, as well as cloud services like EchoSign (a signature software company Adobe acquired last year) and FormsCentral, Adobe’s software for building forms and using the data they collect.
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Oh, and there’ll be Office and SharePoint integration and PowerPoint, Word, and Excel exports for the Microsoft faithful. In fact, SharePoint and Office 365 are part of Acrobat’s big push into the cloud.
“Working with online forms, collaborative PDF reviews, and signatures are the everyday norm for business professionals who were once simply content creators,” said Acrobat czar* Kevin Lynch in an Adobe-issued statement on the news.
“IT departments need to support these changes while maintaining and maximizing the use of existing infrastructures and systems, as well as provide support and services that enable their organizations to take advantage of new business opportunities, improve results, justify return on investment, and lower the total cost of ownership.”
* Actual title: “senior vice president and general manager of Acrobat and Document Services at Adobe,” but we thought “czar” sounded snappier and conveyed roughly the same sentiment.
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