- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
Reader would work for like 90% of people, but no, everyone needs Standard or Pro because reasons.
Reader would work for like 90% of people, but no, everyone needs Standard or Pro because reasons.
“Hate” is a strong word for my feelings towards Adobe Acrobat reader. But I really don’t like it when I start it to view a pdf, you know the thing it is designed to do, and I have a weird popup, then a toolbar on the right with tools I can’t use cause they’re premium and a toolbar on the left and a toolbar at the top underneath the standard windows toolbar. I just wanna view the pdf man (also weird snapping when you scroll over a page). Haven’t found anything nice yet that just works. I don’t want to use Edge or a browser to view them and mupdf is too light weight. Would really like an evince for windows
Foxit reader, trust
I second this.
Looks like Foxit is freeware with a subscription option for enterprise deployment packages. Not ideal.
Maybe Okular? It’s from the KDE project and it’s on the Windows store.
Foxit has a subscription plan if you need advance tools, it’s perfectly fine (and customizable) if you want to use the standard plan… No ads, no popups, nothing except your pdf and a lot of features you can use for free. You should give it a try, it’s really good.
Ehhh. Still proprietary. I’d rather use open source tools, even if it takes a slight functionality hit.
There’s also SumatraPDF which seems pretty similar to Evince, though I don’t know the latter
I’ll second SumatraPDF. Lightweight, easy.
Try pdf xchange
Okular is quite nice and I believe has a windows port (though I’ve not tried it). https://okular.kde.org/download/
Try Sumatra, PDF24 and or Foxit Reader. There are plenty of alternatives for a pdf reader, and a lot of them are even faster than acrobat!
Wondershare PDFelement is pretty respectable.
It’s annoying AF. But there is an option in the settings to open as it was last closed. So open a file, minimize all those toolbars, save the file, close the file, open a file. Should be good to go.
“Go to Edit > Preferences > Documents, and then select Remember current state of Tools pane.”