![]() Then if the ocr tool really comes through you can switch to Pen with no great loss. I really think you should try out the free version of Expert, both desktop and iPad versions, and see how smoothly it works. I just installed the new version today and I’m going to give it a chance, though I’m a bit dubious because it’s a function lots of apps have tried and failed at-it’s just a tough task to get right I guess. But they just released the version which includes it, like, last week, so who knows if they’ve actually managed to get it right. Is not free, you can click on 'Buy an upgrade. Free, you'll be prompted to enter your name and email address, and you'll be issued a free license. Family Pack licenses, which cover up to five computers in one household, are 99.95 for PDFpen and 159.95 for PDFpenPro. PDFpen retails for US 79.95, PDFpenPro for 129.95. It will notice your previous version and offer to check for a free update. PDFpen and PDFpenPro 12 work with PDFpen for iPad & iPhone version 5, allowing seamless editing across devices when used with Dropbox or iCloud. The desktop and iOS versions work together smoothly through iCloud.īut, of course, you’re also right about the one major feature that supposedly distinguishes PenPro: OCR. from the PDFpen/PDFpenPro menu, or downloading from the PDFpen website. It’s super light weight, but doesn’t feel like it’s missing any functionality compared to AA. Which is the major reason I would recommend Expert. It was occasionally too demanding for my MacBook Pro. I definitely agree with you about Acrobat, which is just also too big of an app to use for your daily tasks. Reading, annotating, and organizing PDFs is the most important and time consuming part of my workflow and I’ve tried all the usual candidates over the years.
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