| ▲ | detourdog 18 hours ago | |||||||
When Acrobat came out cross platform was not common. Being able to publish a document that could be opened on multiple platforms was a big advantage. I was using it to distribute technical specifications in the mid 90's. Different pages of these specifications came from, Filemaker, Excel, Word, Mini-Cad, Photoshop, Illustrator, and probably other applications as well. We would combine these into a single PDF file. This simplified version control. This also meant that bidders could not edit the specifications. None of that could be accomplished with Word alone. I think you are underestimating the qualities of PDF for distribution of complex documents. | ||||||||
| ▲ | ajross 15 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> This also meant that bidders could not edit the specifications. But they can! That's the bug, PDF is a mutable file format owing to Adobe's muckery. And you made the same mistake that every government redactor and censor (up to and including the ?!@$! NSA per the linked article) has in the intervening decades. The file format you thought you were using was a great fit for your problem, and better than MS Word. The software Adobe shipped was, in fact, something else. | ||||||||
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