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No. Acrobat Reader is a free, stand-alone application that you can use to open, view, sign, print, annotate, search, and share PDF files. Acrobat Pro and Acrobat Standard are paid products that are part of the same family. See the Acrobat product comparison to explore the differences.


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Reader makes it easy to annotate PDF documents. With Reader on your desktop, you can: annotate PDFs using sticky notes; type text directly onto the page; highlight, underline, or use strikethrough tools; and draw on the screen with the freehand drawing tool. The same commenting tools are also available in Acrobat Reader for mobile.

Using the Adobe Acrobat Reader mobile app, you can do the same tasks on your iOS or Android devices too. To download the Adobe Acrobat Reader mobile app, visit Google Play or the iTunes App Store. You can also fill and sign forms using your web browser.

Yes. Acrobat Reader provides a limited number of signatures you can request using the Fill & Sign tool, without purchasing a subscription to Acrobat Pro, Adobe Acrobat PDF Pack, or Adobe Acrobat Sign. If you exceed the allowance of free signature transactions, you can subscribe to one of the various Document Cloud solutions to request even more signatures.

Existing customers of Acrobat Sign can use Acrobat Sign mobile app to do the same on Android or iOS. To download the app for free, visit Google Play or the iTunes App Store. You can also send files for signature using your web browser.

No. You cannot make permanent changes to text or images inside PDF files using Acrobat Reader. To edit PDF files, purchase Adobe Acrobat software. If you have a subscription to Adobe Acrobat, you can also edit PDFs from the Adobe Acrobat Reader tablet app.

Security settings and access privileges for a PDF file cannot be set in Reader; however, they can be set using Adobe Acrobat software. With security settings, authors can define who can open, view, print, copy, or modify a document. These capabilities help organizations protect the confidentiality of sensitive information. With access privileges, authors can define a password that users will need to open the document, or they can use a certificate ID to encrypt the document so select recipients can open it by entering their own, unique certificate IDs.

Yes. At Adobe, security practices are deeply ingrained into our internal culture, software development, as well as service operations processes. Whether related to identity management, data confidentiality, or document integrity, Adobe Document Cloud services employ leading-edge security practices to protect your documents, data, and personal identifiable information to the highest degree possible. For additional information about our company security practices, the Adobe Secure Product Lifecycle, or Adobe Document Cloud solution security, see the Adobe Security pages on adobe.com.

From the other screenshot, I see that some of the sheets you are trying to access are in .xlsx format. In order to read those, you would have to use the Google Drive Connector and Excel Reader nodes, since they are not supported by the Google Sheets Reader node.

Good to know, thanks @emilio_s! Another workaround my manager and I found is that you can also access shared drive files by using Google Drive for desktop. By using an Excel Reader node, you can go into all of your Google Drive files on your desktop and select files from there.

I've been a Quicken user since the 1990's. In the beginning, I think I foolishly thought that I should start a new file every year. When I stopped doing that and just kept all data in the current file, I eventually had some performance issues that made me stop using the current file (thinking of it as a "look up" archive) and start a new file.

Going back to the 90's - what were the file extensions used for the files necessary to OPEN a Quicken data file? (I seem to remember that we used to have to have the data and an index file, perhaps?) I don't suppose there's any kind of read-only "previewer" utility for old Quicken files, is there? I just need to get an idea of the dates included in each file, once I determine which files are needed, and go back and document which files contains which data - then convert them all (and maybe IMPORT the data, if possible, so it's ALL in one file).


I ask because there HAVE been a number of times when I've wondered where I bought something, or when I bought something, or how much I paid for something, that could have been from a very long time ago. I'd like this information at my fingertips, if I could. And, since getting a full transaction report exported to a PDF has proven impossible for me, for a number of years (because of report preview/formatting issues due to screen resolution issues), I do NOT have any year-end reporting that would make this easy.

sorry no viewer. You need to open files in the full program. Here's a list I have of file extensions. There might be others. You may need to install older programs if you can find any and might need an old computer.

You might be able to find older versions on the internet like EBay or Amazon, etc. if you do buy an older version you will first need to update it. One of the SuperUsers has posted the update patches for older versions (2000 and newer) of Quicken



If your Quicken was before 2010 you should have several files making up the data. The main data file ends in .QDF. All Quicken versions prior to QW2010 store your data in a series of files all sharing the same filename but with different extensions like - .QDF .IDX, .QEL, .QPH and all 4 of those files were rolled into a single-file .QDF starting in 2010.

This is possible? Are you just no longer able to download transactions, but everything else works okay? (What about security prices?)


Consider the issues I have with being on the most up-to-date version (or close to it) - I would seriously consider rolling back to 2013, if it wasn't a big deal.

About 2013. Yes I enter everything manually. They were letting us download stock quotes but they recently turned that off too. 2013 works fine. 2013 is the last good version before they started requiring an ID and since they went to the subscription model where if you don't renew about 25% of your screen is taken up with an ad to renew.


But no, you can not go back to an earlier version. Quicken is not backward compatible. But if you have another computer you can download 2013 for free and try to convert and open your older files. 152ee80cbc

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