Oisin Feeley wrote:
But, it looks like there's a Google Summer of Code project proposal to
provide annotations to PDF in Evince (one of the popular GNU/Linux PDF
programs that uses the underlying Poppler rendering library):
http://live.gnome.org/Evince/Annotations
The next version of Kpdf
On Thu, 08 Mar 2007, Charles de Miramon apparently wrote:
then maybe drop DVI)
You mean as in: drop the only bullet-proof way to produce
PostScript output?
Cheers,
Alan Isaac
Paul A. Rubin wrote:
Richard Heck wrote:
Oisin Feeley wrote:
Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using the
official Adobe toolchain [snip].
On a related thread, Mircea Trandafir pointed out AREnable
(http://sourceforge.net/projects/arenable/), which apparently
Oisin Feeley wrote:
But, it looks like there's a Google Summer of Code project proposal to
provide annotations to PDF in Evince (one of the popular GNU/Linux PDF
programs that uses the underlying Poppler rendering library):
http://live.gnome.org/Evince/Annotations
The next version of Kpdf
On Thu, 08 Mar 2007, Charles de Miramon apparently wrote:
then maybe drop DVI)
You mean as in: drop the only bullet-proof way to produce
PostScript output?
Cheers,
Alan Isaac
Paul A. Rubin wrote:
Richard Heck wrote:
Oisin Feeley wrote:
Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using the
official Adobe toolchain [snip].
On a related thread, Mircea Trandafir pointed out AREnable
(http://sourceforge.net/projects/arenable/), which apparently
Oisin Feeley wrote:
> But, it looks like there's a Google Summer of Code project proposal to
> provide annotations to PDF in Evince (one of the popular GNU/Linux PDF
> programs that uses the underlying Poppler rendering library):
> http://live.gnome.org/Evince/Annotations
>
The next version of
On Thu, 08 Mar 2007, Charles de Miramon apparently wrote:
> then maybe drop DVI)
You mean as in: drop the only bullet-proof way to produce
PostScript output?
Cheers,
Alan Isaac
Paul A. Rubin wrote:
Richard Heck wrote:
Oisin Feeley wrote:
Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using the
official Adobe toolchain [snip].
On a related thread, Mircea Trandafir pointed out AREnable
(http://sourceforge.net/projects/arenable/), which apparently
Oisin Feeley wrote:
On 3/6/07, Richard Heck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Oisin Feeley wrote:
Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using
the official Adobe toolchain [snip].
Thanks. I guess I shouldn't be surprised. But it really is silly.
Not from the Adobe's perspective
Oisin Feeley wrote:
On 3/6/07, Richard Heck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Oisin Feeley wrote:
Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using
the official Adobe toolchain [snip].
Thanks. I guess I shouldn't be surprised. But it really is silly.
Not from the Adobe's perspective
Oisin Feeley wrote:
> On 3/6/07, Richard Heck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Oisin Feeley wrote:
>> > Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using
>> the official Adobe toolchain [snip].
>> Thanks. I guess I shouldn't be surprised. But it really is silly.
> Not from the Adobe's
Thanks to Uwe for the example file. Here's another question: How can one
enable the commenting feature under Acrobat? This is really useful for
proofs and the like. I'd love to be able to index comments this way on
students' papers.
Richard
--
Richard Heck wrote:
Thanks to Uwe for the example file. Here's another question: How can one
enable the commenting feature under Acrobat? This is really useful for
proofs and the like. I'd love to be able to index comments this way on
students' papers.
I'm pretty sure you need Acrobat Pro to
Maybe this would help: AREnable
(http://sourceforge.net/projects/arenable/). To my knowledge, the way it
works is that you would compile your file as PDF (in LyX) and then run
AREnable on the PDF file to allow Acrobat Reader to add notes, comments
etc. I never used it, but it might work.
Mircea
Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using the
official Adobe toolchain, e.g. this comment in the discussions to a
recent (end of 2006) survey of PDF applications on GNU/Linux seems to
sum up the situation:
Richard Heck schrieb:
Thanks to Uwe for the example file. Here's another question: How can one
enable the commenting feature under Acrobat?
Buy Acrobat, the commenting feature is only available in Acrobat Standard and
higher.
regards Uwe
Oisin Feeley wrote:
Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using the
official Adobe toolchain [snip].
Thanks. I guess I shouldn't be surprised. But it really is silly.
Richard
--
==
Richard G Heck, Jr
Mircea Trandafir wrote:
Maybe this would help: AREnable
(http://sourceforge.net/projects/arenable/). To my knowledge, the way it
works is that you would compile your file as PDF (in LyX) and then run
AREnable on the PDF file to allow Acrobat Reader to add notes, comments
etc. I never used it,
Richard Heck wrote:
Oisin Feeley wrote:
Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using the
official Adobe toolchain [snip].
On a related thread, Mircea Trandafir pointed out AREnable
(http://sourceforge.net/projects/arenable/), which apparently transfers
permissions
Thanks to Uwe for the example file. Here's another question: How can one
enable the commenting feature under Acrobat? This is really useful for
proofs and the like. I'd love to be able to index comments this way on
students' papers.
Richard
--
Richard Heck wrote:
Thanks to Uwe for the example file. Here's another question: How can one
enable the commenting feature under Acrobat? This is really useful for
proofs and the like. I'd love to be able to index comments this way on
students' papers.
I'm pretty sure you need Acrobat Pro to
Maybe this would help: AREnable
(http://sourceforge.net/projects/arenable/). To my knowledge, the way it
works is that you would compile your file as PDF (in LyX) and then run
AREnable on the PDF file to allow Acrobat Reader to add notes, comments
etc. I never used it, but it might work.
Mircea
Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using the
official Adobe toolchain, e.g. this comment in the discussions to a
recent (end of 2006) survey of PDF applications on GNU/Linux seems to
sum up the situation:
Richard Heck schrieb:
Thanks to Uwe for the example file. Here's another question: How can one
enable the commenting feature under Acrobat?
Buy Acrobat, the commenting feature is only available in Acrobat Standard and
higher.
regards Uwe
Oisin Feeley wrote:
Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using the
official Adobe toolchain [snip].
Thanks. I guess I shouldn't be surprised. But it really is silly.
Richard
--
==
Richard G Heck, Jr
Mircea Trandafir wrote:
Maybe this would help: AREnable
(http://sourceforge.net/projects/arenable/). To my knowledge, the way it
works is that you would compile your file as PDF (in LyX) and then run
AREnable on the PDF file to allow Acrobat Reader to add notes, comments
etc. I never used it,
Richard Heck wrote:
Oisin Feeley wrote:
Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using the
official Adobe toolchain [snip].
On a related thread, Mircea Trandafir pointed out AREnable
(http://sourceforge.net/projects/arenable/), which apparently transfers
permissions
Thanks to Uwe for the example file. Here's another question: How can one
enable the commenting feature under Acrobat? This is really useful for
proofs and the like. I'd love to be able to index comments this way on
students' papers.
Richard
--
Richard Heck wrote:
Thanks to Uwe for the example file. Here's another question: How can one
enable the commenting feature under Acrobat? This is really useful for
proofs and the like. I'd love to be able to index comments this way on
students' papers.
I'm pretty sure you need Acrobat Pro to
Maybe this would help: AREnable
(http://sourceforge.net/projects/arenable/). To my knowledge, the way it
works is that you would compile your file as PDF (in LyX) and then run
AREnable on the PDF file to allow Acrobat Reader to add notes, comments
etc. I never used it, but it might work.
Mircea
Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using the
official Adobe toolchain, e.g. this comment in the discussions to a
recent (end of 2006) survey of PDF applications on GNU/Linux seems to
sum up the situation:
Richard Heck schrieb:
Thanks to Uwe for the example file. Here's another question: How can one
enable the commenting feature under Acrobat?
Buy Acrobat, the commenting feature is only available in Acrobat Standard and
higher.
regards Uwe
Oisin Feeley wrote:
> Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using the
> official Adobe toolchain [snip].
Thanks. I guess I shouldn't be surprised. But it really is silly.
Richard
--
==
Richard G Heck, Jr
Mircea Trandafir wrote:
Maybe this would help: AREnable
(http://sourceforge.net/projects/arenable/). To my knowledge, the way it
works is that you would compile your file as PDF (in LyX) and then run
AREnable on the PDF file to allow Acrobat Reader to add notes, comments
etc. I never used it,
Richard Heck wrote:
Oisin Feeley wrote:
Comments in PDF seem to be something that's only available using the
official Adobe toolchain [snip].
On a related thread, Mircea Trandafir pointed out AREnable
(http://sourceforge.net/projects/arenable/), which apparently transfers
permissions
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