It has, and I have not seen any issues with pdfs. Then again, I rarely use pdf forms, and when I do, I end up using Xournal on my N810/N900. That allows me to overlay a scratchpad over the pdf on which I can type/write/draw (which means I can sign them as well), then export the whole thing to pdf.
On the desktop, I mainly read books, etc...Or more likely, convert them to epub. :) --b On Sun, Sep 5, 2010 at 4:42 AM, John A. Sullivan III < jsulli...@opensourcedevel.com> wrote: > On Sat, 2010-09-04 at 23:23 -0400, B. Alexander wrote: > > You should also probably consider an alternative to Acrobat for PDF, > > since Adobe seems to have at least one security alert per week. My > > wife's computer (running lenny) had acrobat installed and she had the > > same problem...I uninstalled acrobat and she was able to open it in > > kpdf and print just fine. > > > > --b > > > > On Sat, Sep 4, 2010 at 3:57 PM, AG <computing.acco...@googlemail.com> > > wrote: > > Hello list > > > > I seem to have lost the ability to print from Adobe Acrobat > > using Debian Testing. OOo prints just fine as do other > > applications, but for some reason Adobe doesn't want to play > > nicely with CUPS. Can anyone offer me a way of debugging this > > and resolving the situation please? > > > > The Adobe in question is 9.3.1. Thanks for any assistance. > > > <snip> > Unless you need to access complex PDF files. We had tried that as well > as KPDF is much lighter and faster but, it did not open some PDF and > lacked some features of Acrobat Reader that were important for some of > our clients. I suppose the only way to see if it works better for you > is to try it. Actually, if you are on Testing, I believe KPDF has been > superseded by Okular (I think that's the new KDE4 PDF reader) - John > > >