Way back in the early 1990s, Adobe released the Portable Document Format (PDF). Ever since, PDFs have been a key tool in getting work done -- and that's about it. For the most part, PDFs remain ...
Two weeks ago I asked ProfHacker readers, “How Do You Organize and Annotate PDFs?”, and you rose to the challenge. I can’t recount the entire discussion here (though it’s well worth reading through in ...
Ahead of the arrival of the Pixel tablet, Google has been optimising the first-party apps for tablets. A new update has come to Google Drive, which now enables users to annotate PDFs using a stylus or ...
Annotating PDFs in your browser can be a game changer for productivity, making it easier to highlight, comment, and share ...
Google’s push to optimize its first-party apps on tablets continues with Drive for Android adding the ability to annotate PDFs using a stylus or finger. You will be able to “use your finger or a ...
Manuel Vonau was Android Police's Google Editor until April 2024, with expertise in Android, Chrome, Pixels, and other Google products. For five years, he covered tech news and reviewed devices after ...
Computers aren’t the only devices people use for work, nowadays. Smartphone technology has grown in leaps and bounds over the last few years, enabling people to use a range of devices to do their ...
Academics work with a lot of PDF files—journal articles, scanned ILL materials, and, increasingly, historical documents available through archives such as Google Books. After my first few posts here ...
On Windows and Mac machines, it’s not too troublesome to add text or drawings (such as signatures) to PDF files, but [Mansour Behabadi] found that on Linux machines, there didn’t seem to be a ...