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Adobe LiveCycle Reader Extensions ES
| Fill in, sign, comment on, or save Adobe PDF files using only Adobe Reader |
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People around the world use free and
ubiquitous Adobe® Reader® software — installed on more than 700 million
desktops around the world — to read PDF documents. But when you engage
with these external users, it is very likely you will want them to do
more than simply read a PDF document; you will want them to fill out a
form, provide feedback, or in some other way participate in your
business processes.
With Adobe LiveCycle® Reader Extensions ES
software, you can quickly and easily activate functionality within
Adobe Reader (version 7 and above), enabling end users to save, fill
in, annotate, sign, and submit PDF documents and forms — online or
offline. LiveCycle Reader Extensions ES works with existing IT assets
to create an automated environment for capturing information and
feedback vital to helping your organization cut costs, improve customer
satisfaction, speed time to market, and extend the value of your
investment in enterprise applications.
Why Reader Extensions ES |
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Extend
document-based processes outside your organization to better engage
with customers, partners, constituents, and colleagues. |
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Improve user experiences and flexibility by extending PDF files to an offline environment. |
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Improve collaboration and streamline document reviews. |
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Enhance the security of enterprise forms and data with digital signatures. |
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How it works
LiveCycle Reader Extensions ES works hand in hand with Adobe Reader, which is available free of charge and easily downloaded from Adobe.com. LiveCycle Reader Extensions ES enables you to embed usage rights within
an Adobe PDF document. These usage rights "turn on" functionality
within Adobe Reader, so end users can view and interact with PDF
documents.
Step 1. Add rights to the PDF file
Turn on functionality for Adobe Reader. You can
add rights to single documents or batches of documents through the API
as part of a process, or through common foundation invocation methods
such as web service calls or watched folders.
Step 2. Distribute the PDF file
Make the PDF file available through whatever
means you prefer, whether it is physical media, a file download, or
online web access.
Step 3. Use the PDF file
Normally latent end-user capabilities are
automatically activated when the rights-enabled Adobe PDF document is
launched within Adobe Reader. When the user is finished working with
the document, those functions are once again disabled until the user
receives another rights-enabled PDF file. All of this functionality
comes at no additional cost to your customers, constituents, partners,
or colleagues.
Key capabilities
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