![]() ![]() On the whole, I found it much easier and more intuitive to navigate Power PDF than Acrobat XI. I’m being a tad rough on the Power PDF interface, but there’s far more good than bad. Dialogs continually popped up at the far left corner of the screen. Also, with a dynamic zoom tool (click/hold and move the mouse backwards and forwards to zoom in and out) that works wonderfully on its own, why the duplicative old-fashioned separate zoom-in and zoom-out tools? If you come up with a better way, people will use it-multiple methodologies confuse and waste space. However, in my hands-on with 1.0, there were one or two immature moments. Power PDF’s paned interface is eye-catchingly rendered in the latest Microsoft style and has some welcome layout features. Power PDF offers a range of security options. There are also the usual text editing and comment tools plus a nice drag-and-drop watermark feature with a number of templates. Other nice Power PDF features include cloud service conduits and integrated text-to-speech. There are a full set of form controls including buttons, radio buttons, check boxes-all the stuff you’re used to from dialog boxes. Power PDF supports the latest in PDF forms technology, including conversion of plain PDFs to forms.
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