MS press release says "powering the Microsoft Edge built-in PDF reader with the Adobe Acrobat PDF engine". Further details on the announcement page says "Natively embedding Acrobat PDF technology in Microsoft Edge." It's not just a simple re-skin with an Adobe logo tacked on. The PDF engine currently in Edge not only refuses to load anything built in LiveCycle, but it also screws up form fields (and in some cases, opening in Edge then saving to desktop actually causes the form to be broken in Acrobat - cannot sign the form, it refuses to save and throws an error.) Using the Adobe engine would fix this.It's not exactly acrobat in your browser. It's the sane exact PDF viewer UI only with an acrobat badge in the lower right hand corner.
I imagine it would handle forms ok because acrobat does.
----
WE have come a long way from Vista days when Adobe was trying to go after microsoft for embrace and extend of the PDF format even though microsoft just added PDF support to office and produced bog standard PDFs
Pbbbt! I downloaded via dialup, a full Slackware distro in floppy images and installed it back around 1995. Back when having to manually enter in modeline values for monitors into your XFree86Config file was more or less standard fair. Around 2004 I had moved away from Linux because it just got to be too much hassle to turn in college assignments using Linux, but at least until around the time XP came out I was running Gentoo. I have to say, the experience with Slackware made it a lot easier to understand what was going on in the instructions to install Gentoo.Slackware, with a SCSI CD drive.
(Having actually fought my way through such an install ca. 2004 or so, the pain levels feel comparable)
People wouldn't use other PDF readers if Acrobat Reader weren't so huge and slow.(Filling out forms in any viewer other than Acrobat consistently breaks form field automation, strips out any scripting, flattens the form making entries impossible to batch-export, and so on. I really and truly hate how bad people are at forms.)
I misspoke there. I meant to say it's the same exact UI there, only with adobe's PDF engine powering it. My badMS press release says "powering the Microsoft Edge built-in PDF reader with the Adobe Acrobat PDF engine". Further details on the announcement page says "Natively embedding Acrobat PDF technology in Microsoft Edge." It's not just a simple re-skin with an Adobe logo tacked on. The PDF engine currently in Edge not only refuses to load anything built in LiveCycle, but it also screws up form fields (and in some cases, opening in Edge then saving to desktop actually causes the form to be broken in Acrobat - cannot sign the form, it refuses to save and throws an error.) Using the Adobe engine would fix this.
If that is what you're trying to avoid, your only real choice is Linux. And while Linux has a lot of attractive features, until you can do most management tasks without dropping to command line it will only be a niche product. Which is not to say that I'm not going that direction once I retire and no long have an employer forcing me to use Microsoft products.I am so glad I moved off Windows years ago... no longer at Microsoft's non-existent mercy and competence.
PowerShell says "Hi!"If that is what you're trying to avoid, your only real choice is Linux. And while Linux has a lot of attractive features, until you can do most management tasks without dropping to command line it will only be a niche product.
That's because Microsoft has technological barriers preventing that.The only vendor that makes "unrequested modifications to a user's choices" on my computer is Microsoft. Several defaults got reset to Microsoft the last time I allowed Windows to update.
It's better than Google at least, which I'll grant isn't a high bar. I've seen the edge popup maybe twice. Chrome though, every single fucking time I go to a Google web service, and there are a lot of them.their own nag nag nag for edge is so damned annoying
Mixed feelings. Maybe it will fix Edge's horrible handling of bookmarks. Why does that pane auto-hide? I want it open all the time (in fact I want it to open automatically and stay open).Jokes on you, Adobe merged Acrobat into Edge![]()
Having Type & Creator codes (hi ResEdit!) makes using a part of the filename metadata field to store the type and creator seem totally stupid. But I don't know whether Mac OS X respects Type/Creator codes - does it, or does it have a different system? It dumped a few really nice Mac OS features. Grrr.File associations is one of the things that, IMHO, Windows continues to do quite poorly compared to macOS. <snip>
I don't get it, "Open With" is actually one of the few right click menu items that MS didn't hide behind a second click on Win 11 (probably the most irritating UI "improvement" IMHO). It works just like it did on Win 10, there is an option to "always use this application to open this file type" which sets the default app
Funny you say that, I just had to install the stand-alone Acrobat Reader on someone's machine here, because nothing else, not Edge, not Firefox, not PowerPDF, could open a document they received properly. If it wasn't missing entirely, it was halfway off the page.Jokes on you, Adobe merged Acrobat into Edge![]()
I literally just flipped every last "background app" off with a single switch and haven't noticed a single negative result of it. When I want to run any of those apps, I just run them. This also changed in Windows 11? Well nuts to that... Of course, there's a lot more to optimizing a Windows machine than just what's in the app list, sadly. That's where autoruns comes in handy.AND DAMMIT, bring back the ONE list of "background apps" that you can toggle on/off, instead of the monstrosity the app setup is now, where you have to go into each app to change that setting.
Also - stop changing my start menu's setup every damned update. And it's not even right after the update. It's like 2 days later, BAM - completely different start menu.
It's a shame comments close so damn quickly on that site, because good god is that just begging for someone to tell. The old one he's talking about is IPinnedList::Modify (Vista) and IPinnedList2::Modify (Win7-early Win10), the 5th vtable entry counting IUnknown's 3.Some debugging of the tertiary installer revealed that it was trying to pin itself to the taskbar automatically on install. This is one of those things that installers love to do, probably second only to silently taking over popular file extensions. This particularly program’s approach was to find the vtable for the internal interface that Explorer uses to pin items to the taskbar, and then call the fifth function in the vtable.
The application compatibility issue was that we changed the signature of the fifth function in the vtable, so they were calling the function with the old signature, and the implementation was therefore misinterpreting the parameters, and as a bonus insult, it also corrupted the stack because the number of parameters also changed.
The solution was to restore the function to its original signature and have it just return without doing anything, decorated with comments to ensure that the method stays at the same slot in the vtable for eternity. Meanwhile, the new functionality was moved to a different location. (I’m not telling where.)
I love bland rectangles, and I actually actively despise the "curved corner" look of their current UI. I'm not going to cut myself on virtual corners, I promise you MS. Now give me back the full screen real estate.Can we just get the Win7 UI back ? Port the low-level improvements, but just admit your mistake and go back to 7, or even XP. It was so much nicer than the bland flat windows we have to stare at all day.
Please ?
Remember in Windows 8, how you literally could not print PDF's in the default PDF app? It just wasn't a supported feature.OH THANK GOD
No, REALLY. As an administrator who develops and deploys Adobe forms for our program, you have NO FLIPPING IDEA how many times I have had to talk people through the incredibly difficult task of opening a PDF in Acrobat.
"No, you opened it in Edge. No, your PDF viewer is not outdated, that's what you see when a form like that is opened in Edge. No, there is nothing wrong with the form, you just need to open it in Adobe. Nope, you downloaded the form, but you double-clicked it and it opened up in Edge again. You can't fill the form out and sign it in Edge, you need to do it in Adobe."
It absolutely sucks and some people just do not understand how they can possibly have two programs that can open a PDF. The old Adobe plug-in for IE trained a generation of office drones that opening it in browser meant it was open in Adobe, and talking them through the differences is like talking your grandmother through a bare-metal Linux install over the phone.
(Filling out forms in any viewer other than Acrobat consistently breaks form field automation, strips out any scripting, flattens the form making entries impossible to batch-export, and so on. I really and truly hate how bad people are at forms.)
I'm pretty sure @pjcamp isn't saying that you can't do a lot of things via commandline in Windows; instead, they are saying that there are many things in Linux that cannot be done via the UI.PowerShell says "Hi!"
Agreed. I also appear to be in the minority and actually like Edge at work vs. Chrome. I'm under no illusions about what Edge is or what it represents for Microsoft; however, Google is doing essentially the same exact things with Chrome.I know I'm and "edge case" having used Edge since it switched to Chromium
I just want to point out that Google is also quite obnoxious with its notifications every time I access Google Maps or Gmail on Edge, asking me if I want to use Chrome instead.
Besides the obvious point of your statement, it's also funny because Windows Mail is bad. Very, very, very bad.My favorite moment was the one time Windows tried to talk me out of setting Outlook instead of Mail on a company system.
You can enable inline spell check, grammar check, and a bunch of other MS Editor features in the online version of Outlook. And you can enable a delay of up to 10 seconds between pressing "Send" and the message actually being sent. Combined, you get most of the benefit of "run through a spell check before sending".Great! I can use Outlook Desktop instead of M365 Outlook as a Web Service/OWS/ OWA!
Outlook on the Web does not allow File/Print/Table view to print a list of the contents of a mailbox. Web browser view prints just one page, the page you see on the screen. Doesn't matter if the mailbox has 4,000 items in it, you can't print that as a list, just one screen grab at a time. For 4,000 items. (Mailbox export not permitted and triggers an alarm).
Outlook on the Web does not display "time of email" for any email older than four weeks. Apparently users no longer need to refer to old emails. It's a records management painpoint.
Outlook on the Web has no "automatically spell check before sending". Just aargh.
As far as I remember, the registry allowed this at least since XP, and it still works.Starting with Windows Vista or 7 (I don't recall which), Microsoft created an Associations system where a program would register what File Extensions / URL Schemes the program could handle […]
It's not even the question that gets me, it's when the OS just sets it to that automatically without even bothering to ask after a certain amount of time, or resets, have passed.As far as I remember, the registry allowed this at least since XP, and it still works.
The problem here is Microsoft apps stealing associations without asking, or asking sneaky questions each and every time their apps are updated.
I would really appreciate the third choice here when Microsoft stuff asks permission to steal associations:
Do you want Edge to be your default browser?
Option 3 nicely sets a flag in the registry to remember my choice, so next time I won’t be asked again.
- Yes
- No
- WTF, I said NO last time and you keep f* asking. It is NO FOREVER. NO. Capeesh?
Is this something that happens? I haven't tried Win 11 yet, but on my Win 10 PC I set Firefox to the default browser long ago and it's stayed that way through multiple feature upgrades and the initial Edge installation.It's not even the question that gets me, it's when the OS just sets it to that automatically without even bothering to ask after a certain amount of time, or resets, have passed.
You can enable inline spell check, grammar check, and a bunch of other MS Editor features in the online version of Outlook. And you can enable a delay of up to 10 seconds between pressing "Send" and the message actually being sent. Combined, you get most of the benefit of "run through a spell check before sending".
Doesn't help with the other 999 cuts that you have to endure while using Outlook, though.God, that's a horrible piece of software, whether it's standalone, online, on a phone, anywhere.