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SecurSign 5 Now Available! Includes Signature Validation to Detect Tampering.
Lansdowne, PA (July 13, 2011)
Encrypt, digitally sign and verify digital signatures on PDF documents.

Redax 5: Advanced Redaction for PDF Documents
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
The latest Redax adds new patterns, regular expressions and more!

Redax Enterprise Server 3 Ships!
Thursday, January 6, 2011
New Redaction Engine, Powerful New Markup Options and More!

Survey: Server Based PDF Applications
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
The 2010 Survey asked about PDF server application development.

5 PDF Readers Compared
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Expanding on our previous review, we've included Nitro's Reader and Adobe's new Reader X.

PDF Form Aids Sales Team Collaboration
Friday, November 26, 2010
Take a document, add a dash of JavaScript, a sprinkling of PDF know-how, and serve.

Section 508 Center for PDF now online!
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
A key resource for document authors, content managers and Section 508 coordinators concerned with PDF accessibility.

Case Study: MedWiz Technologies
Friday, November 12, 2010
It's a lot more than simply knowing JavaScript; it's the background, the analysis and the thought that counts.

Section 508 Coordinators Conference
Monday, November 1, 2010
Join us at the annual Federal agencies conference to discuss Section 508.

PDF/UA Introduced at ATIA
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Unveils ISO 14289 for accessible PDF at the AT industry's conference in Chicago

REVIEW: PDF Accessibility Checker
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
We test Switzerland's latest contribution to PDF accessibility - and we like it!

Duff Johnson named Vice-Chair of the PDF/A Competence Center
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Joins PDF/A Competence Center Board at the PDF/A Conference in Rome, Italy

StampPDF DE updated to 5.1
Friday, October 1, 2010
Now repowered with the latest StampPDF Batch engine!

4th PDF/A Conference in Rome, Italy
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
PDF/A-2, PDF accessibility, and pasta!

Tech Talk for AcrobatUsers: Tagging for Reuse
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
This 60 minute webinar explains how to get reliable text-extraction from PDF documents.

Appligent featured in PDF World (pdf)

Featuring Appligent's new Forms API

PDF on the iPhone: The First Swipe

by Duff Johnson

iPhoneAs the iPhone continues to grow in popularity, business applications for the iPhone OS are proliferating. Inevitably, a number of these applications focus on electronic documents, which is another way of saying (whether their developers recognize it or not) that they focus on PDF files.

This article surveys a few of the current crop of PDF-aware applications for the iPhone. I selected the features that seemed significant based on what I found, then rated each implementation  for concept and execution. All software was current as of October 5, 2009. I focused on PDF-handling features, with relatively less attention paid to connectivity, support for non-PDF formats, and so on. By way of disclosure, Appligent Document Solutions has not released iPhone software, so we don't have a dog in this fight.

Generally speaking, all PDF apps for the iPhone are simply viewers. Before you go looking, rest assured that none yet offer form-filling, submission, digital signatures, support for Acrobat JavaScript, etc. There are MANY PDF handling and manipulation features I can think of that none of these apps can (yet) manage, but instead of kvetching about what's lacking, this is a review of what's on offer today.

All testing was conducted on an iPhone 3GS (black, of course). Ratings given are from 0 to 5, with 5 being the highest score, 1 meaning minimal effort and 0 indicating that no attempt was made to offer the feature at all.

One final note: If you are selling a PDF app, you need to demonstrate that you have a clue as to the appropriate use of PDF. Most vendors surveyed here provide their product documentation in PDF form. That's not a bad thing per se, but none of these bothered to ask themselves whether an 8.5x11 inch page format is really ideal for users reading the manual on the iPhone. Accordingly, all vendors providing documentation in this format got an automatic score of “1” for thoughtlessness in this area.

iPhone default, OS 3.1 by Apple

Verdict: Minimum baseline for PDF handling performance on the iPhone. If you want to charge money for a PDF viewing application, it better outperform the basic iPhone itself.

Price: Free with iPhone

Feature

Rating

Notes

Downloads PDFs to iPhone

1

View in Safari only

Swipe to turn pages

3

Duh. Momentum in the swipe is well handled

Maintain files/folders on iPhone

0

None attempted

Pan & zoom controls

2

1 level of tap-zoom/unzoom. No panning, no closeup

PDF Reflow

0

None attempted

Address right-to-left languages

0

None attempted

Use links

0

None attempted

Find text

0

None attempted

Manage display orientation

1

No controls provided

Use PDF bookmarks

0

None attempted

Goto page number

0

No way to navigate except by flipping

Copy text to clipboard

0

None attempted

Document Information

0

No access to PDF document information

Documentation

0

None provided

goodreader.jpgGoodReader 2.3, by Good iWare

Verdict: Excellent, full-featured PDF viewing plus on-phone storage, PDF reflow and other features.

Price: $4.99 (I paid $0.99 before October 1)

Feature

Rating

Notes

Downloads PDFs to iPhone

3

A variety of options are provided, but NOT Bluetooth or support for email attachments.

Swipe to turn pages

4

Vertical only, no horizontal option

Maintain folders on iPhone

5

Excellent, lots of options

Pan & zoom controls

4

Supports multiple zoom levels, panning “zones”

PDF Reflow

4

Uses PDF structure if available (yay!), otherwise it imputes a structure. This feature is great, and would get a 5 if the application supported tagged PDF)

Text search

4

Includes “next” and “previous” options

Flip search string

3

Intended to address right-to-left languages (clumsy)

Use links

5

Includes “show links” and “link priority” features

Search right-to-left languages

3

Works by “flipping” the search string. Clunky, but at least they are thinking about the problem.

Manage display orientation

5

Supports reading in any position

Use PDF bookmarks

5

Supports child bookmarks, uses existing or create new iPhone-specific bookmarks.

Goto page number

4

Standard numeric keypad, reports total page count

Copy text to clipboard

1

Copies a whole page of text while in reflow mode

Document Information

0

No access to PDF document information

Documentation

5

Excellent, text-based documentation, optimized for the iPhone (hint, hint) and just a click away from any document.

Looksee iconLOOK:SEE 2.0, by Kristof Kowalski

Verdict: Useless

Price: $0.99

Feature

Rating

Notes

Downloads PDFs to iPhone

2

Bluetooth and WiFi, no web downloads

Swipe to turn pages

3

As iPhone default

Maintain folders on iPhone

1

File list only

Pan & zoom controls

0

None beyond iPhone defaults

PDF Reflow

0

None attempted

Search right-to-left languages

0

None attempted

Use links

0

None attempted

Find text

0

None attempted

Manage display orientation

1

None beyond iPhone defaults

Use PDF bookmarks

0

Allows addition of iPhone specific bookmarks

Goto page number

1

Offers standard keypad, does not report total pages

Copy text to clipboard

0

None attempted

Document Information

0

No access to PDF document information

Documentation

1

Documentation in PDF, but in US letter page-size only serves to highlight the lameness of the application's PDF handling.

PDF Expert by ReaddlePDF Expert 1.2.1, by Readdle

Verdict: This app offers a (clunky) solution for getting emailed PDFs into the viewer, but it's no PDF expert.

Price: $4.99

Feature

Rating

Notes

Downloads PDFs to iPhone

3

WiFi only, no direct download from the web. “Readdle storage” (an online service) provided for access to pdfs in email.

Swipe to turn pages

1

Yes, but no “momentum”, which seems to reduce efficient scrolling.

Maintain files/folders on iPhone

3

File list and folders on iPhone. Files may be stored on Readdle's server, new files may be added via email

Pan & zoom controls

1

Like iPhone, but no panning “momentum” when zoomed

PDF Reflow

0

None attempted

Address right-to-left languages

0

None attempted

Use links

0

None attempted

Find text

4

Provides on-screen highlight

Manage display orientation

3

Allows lock to portrait orientation

Use PDF bookmarks

2

One level only, allows iPhone-specific bookmarks

Goto page number

1

Offers standard keypad, does not report total pages

Copy text to clipboard

2

Provides vertical selection zone

Document Information

0

No access to PDF document information

Documentation

1

Documentation in PDF, but in US letter page-size

PDF+ iconPDF+ 1.10, by mBrain Software

Verdict: A solid PDF viewer, PDF+ offers local storage and a few extras.

Price: $2.99

Feature

Rating

Notes

Downloads PDFs to iPhone

3

Download from the web, share via WiFi

Swipe to turn pages

2

As iPhone default

File storage

4

Files may be downloaded and stored locally.

Maintain files/folders on iPhone

3

Store files or folders, rename option

Pan & zoom controls

2

No tap to unzoom, worse than plain iPhone

PDF Reflow

0

None attempted

Address right-to-left languages

0

None attempted

Use links

5

Highlights, follows links to URLs and other pages

Find text

2

Simple search, no “next”, “previous” etc.

Manage display orientation

0

None attempted

Use PDF bookmarks

2

One level only

Goto page number

4

Offers standard keypad, reports total pages

Copy text to clipboard

0

None attempted

Document Information

4

Read-only access

Documentation

1

Documentation in PDF, but in US letter page-sizee.

PDFReader iconPDFReader 1.1, by iTech Development Systems

Verdict: For all the fake Adobe graphics, this application sure doesn't work like Adobe Reader.

Price: $1.99

Feature

Rating

Notes

Downloads PDFs to iPhone

3

Downloads from the web, uploads via WiFi

Swipe to turn pages

2

As iPhone default

File storage

4

Files may be downloaded and stored locally.

Maintain files/folders on iPhone

2

Store files or in folders, lame interface

Pan & zoom controls

3

About the same as the iPhone

PDF Reflow

0

None attempted

Address right-to-left languages

0

None attempted

Use links

0

None attempted

Find text

1

Simple search, no “next”, “previous” etc. No highlight, extra clicks involved

Manage display orientation

0

As iPhone

Use PDF bookmarks

0

Can create iPhone bookmarks

Goto page number

1

Offers standard keypad in portrait only, no page total

Copy text to clipboard

0

None attempted

Document Information

0

None attempted

Documentation

0

None provided

Conclusion

Good iWare's Good Reader is head and shoulders above the other applications in this survey. A few more pdf-handling iPhone apps have shown up on the AppStore since I blew $20 buying the above-mentioned crop, and I'll be testing the Good Reader against them in a forthcoming article.

Clearly, there's a lot of scope for PDF applications on the iPhone. Some features that offer real potential for business (such as the ability to digitally sign a PDF) simply aren't available yet. Of course, digital signatures have yet to take the world by storm in any event, so perhaps iPhone developers don't yet feel the call. I see it differently – if users could fill forms and approve final PDF documents from their iPhones, I tend to think that would offer more value than the price of a (cheap) cup of coffee.

All applications surveyed may be downloaded from Apple's AppStore.