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#1 |
Recovering Gadget Addict
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Join Date: May 2004
Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Device: iPad
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Reading PDF Documents on a PDA
![]() Over the months and years, we've seen a lot of proposed methods for reading pdf (Acrobat Reader) documents. I'm not sure, though, if any of these are clean, reliable and relatively successful. I think many of us would be very interested to hear if anyone has found a good solution at a reasonable price. Maybe there are even a few great solutions buried in our forums here that I've missed, and which deserve to be trumpeted again. Some of the ideas I vaguely recall hearing about are:
1) If necessary, the conversion process can be done on a PC, but should not require Palm Desktop or hotsync. You should be able to just transfer to a storage card. 2) Reads just about any (non-DRM'd) pdf file adequately 3) Can turn pages and search reasonably fast 4) Works on smaller screens like a Treo or 240x320 standard resolution PPC 5) Can handle large documents. 6) Can read documents from storage cards 7) Bonus points if it costs less than $30 8) More bonus points for reasonable RAM memory requirements Or.... maybe this is beyond our capabilities in the mobile world right now? Surely not! |
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#2 |
Junior Member
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Karma: 10
Join Date: Aug 2005
Device: Tungsten T3
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PDF & Browsing
I came across this thread over at 1src.com. Hands down, if you want native support for PDF, with zoom and web browsing, PicselBrowser is IT!
It's a long read, but worth it. http://www.1src.com/forums/showthrea...0&page=1&pp=15 |
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#3 | |
Evangelist
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Canada
Device: Assorted older devices
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Quote:
As for Palms/PPCs, I think the best current option would be to convert to HTML and then run it through Plucker or iSilo or something... You may have some luck looking at Ghostscript, but I haven't really done much with it myself. |
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#4 |
Guru
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Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Nashville, TN
Device: SGS3/PW2/Nexus72
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Adobe reader works pretty good with a vga pocketpc (using the VGA hack). I can see the entire screen and almost read it. at ~80% I can read it comfortably..no big deal for me.
I've read great things about repligo, but never have tried it. |
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#5 |
Enthusiast
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Karma: 2258
Join Date: Jun 2005
Device: Loox 720
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Thats a rather old article (2001!) Adobe reader for pocketpc has grown rather a bit (its now 7.5Mb installed). Its still slow and clunky, but displays rather well, and is quite usable. Unless its an e-book you are reading the text would likely contain tables and figures which would be best viewed with the native adobe pdf client.
Here's a pdf of the lifedrive on my VGA pocketpc. ![]() LifeDrive Datasheet PDF Surur Last edited by surur; 08-09-2005 at 07:13 PM. |
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#6 |
Connoisseur
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Karma: 2418
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Fremont, CA, USA
Device: Tungsten|C with Nokia6200
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In reference to Palm viewers"
Most PDF -> HTML converters are hit-n-miss as soon as you introduce columns and graphics. Adobe Acrobat Pro does the best job, of course, but at a nasty price tag. Documents-to-go only converts the text. However, it does a good job of it. I've heard of email/web services that convert PDF to TIFF, but that's a lot of bandwidth and waiting. No thanks. The Palm Adobe reader does a good job, but you have to convert it first on the desktop. Also, the reader seems rather crash-prone. Picsel Browser (if you can snag a shady copy of it) does an excellent job of reading native PDFs without conversion, but it does not reformat them for your screen. So, you'll be doing a lot of panning and zooming to read the article. However, it works nice and fast. A pity that Sony has them locked-down to exclusive licensing. I am still perplexed as to why Picsel Browser is the ONLY PDF viewer. Jeez, we are buried by numerous graphical viewers that support a dizzying array of formats. Reading and WRITING Microsoft documents is now old-hat. I constantly see shouts for a native PDF viewer, yet the developers are silent. Is there some sort of licensing restriction I'm not aware of? You'd think that someone would have made use of the ghostscript or pdfx code by now. Odd. - Jim |
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#7 |
Technology Mercenary
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Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: East Lyme, CT
Device: Direct Neural Implant
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I love when people use XML on the web (note: XML has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with the web), and then don't produce valid content from it for browsers.
If the document is sourced from XML, which MUST be well-formed, how can you possibly screw it up so badly that it ends up being completely invalid, incorrect, malformed non-HTML? (There's only 121 errors on that first page) |
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#8 |
Technology Mercenary
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Karma: 2561
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: East Lyme, CT
Device: Direct Neural Implant
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Another thought:
If content providers want you to be able to view their content on your mobile device, they should produce it in a format that is suitable for that device. Hint: PDF is not that format. By voicing your opinion to these content providers (in an intelligent, lucid fashion), you can change their minds. For those that do not wish to adapt to suit their customer's needs, go elsewhere. There are plenty of other vendors who would be happy to help you (in exchange for your sale, of course). If we keep coming up with workarounds, converters, and bass-ackward solutions to getting a PDF document on a Palm device, we don't give the content provider any reason to change their broken behavior. If what I want to read is only available in PDF, I go elsewhere, and I let the content provider know I went elsewhere, and why. We all have a voice, lets start using it. Without us, they would have no market. |
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#9 |
Junior Member
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Karma: 10
Join Date: May 2005
Device: Loox 720, Treo 650
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I have used ClearVue PDF for PPC with mixed success. It doesn't require any conversion of files which is a plus point, but the fact that only seems to like 50% of the files I use it on rather cancels that out!
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#10 |
Member
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Karma: 10
Join Date: May 2005
Device: Treo 650
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Here is more about Repligo in a news article I published at 1SRC back in January of 2004. I looked over it, and it still is applicable today. I use Repligo for everything.
News Article on 1SRC Personally, I think the Repligo product from Cerience is the best solution for the Palm platform. It allows different type views. It has flawlessly converted many large PDF files for me. It is much faster than any other viewer on the Palm, Pocket PC, and Windows platforms. In my opinion, it is the best option for the Pocket PC, also. Adobe Reader is excellent for reading for native PDF files, but it is a pig (as is the desktop version). Repligo is small and fast! Just my two cents. Check it out for yourself. ![]() Thanks, Lance |
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#11 |
Fully Converged
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Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Switzerland
Device: Too many to count here.
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Repligo:
I used Repligo in the past, but now I prefer to convert PDF files to HTML and read them with one of my favorite e-book readers (for the better or worse). Repligo looks great, but it hasn't been updated or actively supported in a while (RepliGo 2.0 for PPC was released 1.5 years ago). On my Axim X50v, I noticed that sometimes fonts in Repligo look "washed out" (even in reflow mode). Images are not shown in reflow mode which is another drawback. Converting: Always a scary business. But if you have to convert PDF content, I recommend Iceni Gemini. It's not cheap ($159, gasp), but it does the best job converting difficult layouts. There is an older thread with good hints on how to survive the PDF nightmare. |
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#12 | ||
Recovering Gadget Addict
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Quote:
Quote:
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#13 | |
Fully Converged
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#14 | |
Recovering Gadget Addict
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Quote:
I didn't do a lot of testing with it, but I did discover that it didn't do well with the Pimlico DateBk5 manual when I converted it and then iSiloX'd it. Text was okay, but I needed the images to make sense of it. And if I remember right, I may have had some issues even with text only, but can't remember. Repligo shows the document well, but you either have reflow with text only, and you can't see where images are missing (useless for the DateBk5 manual), or you have to drag the picture around the screen which is really annoying on a tiny screen. I wonder if the full Adobe Acrobat 6 or Gemini could handle that document decently for Palm viewing? Maybe Repligo is the best solution for non image-critical docs (it's inexpensive, simple out-of-the-box, supported, and it works on any document you can print also!) I might try Acrobat for PalmOS again, but with only 22 total RAM on my Treo650, and only 12meg free right now even being stingy, I'm hesitant to lose another large chunk of memory. Oh my, scratch that last thought! I seem to have been wrong and it's not nearly as bloated as I thought... according to the Adobe faq for PalmOS Adobe Reader, it only needs 600K, and it can read files on a storage card. So I'll give the Adobe reader for Palm another try. It is upgraded from the last version I used (v2), but doesn't seem real recent. For example, it's based on Adobe Reader 6 not 7, but that might actually be a plus. We'll see what happens. |
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#15 |
Fully Converged
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Bob the DateBk manual looks like a tough nut. Haven't even bothered to try Adobe Acrobat or Gemini; I think you can forget PDF->HTML conversion tools here, because of the complex document structure. Sometimes it uses three columns, then only one, and here and there occasionally two columns. A nightmare.
If I had to read this document on my PDA, I'd use Repligo. Adobe Acrobat Reader I tried long time ago and from what I remember it was terribly s-l-o-w and not really pretty either. |
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