Posted by: Anonymous Coward
on November 28, 2006 08:41 PM
Adobe Reader is your only choice if you want to view PDFs in a Netscape, Mozilla, Firefox, or Opera browser window, since it comes with a Netscape 4-compatible plugin.
This is patialy wrong gpdf is another one that can be used through the mozilla-bonobo plugin.
Also this article seems to be very unresearched. It lacks to mention gpdf, epdf(still experimental but it works, based on the E Fundation libraries)(there is also EPDF - eiffel based pdf creation library), svp(doesn't seem to be active but svgalib based), gspdf(gnustep app). And I'm guessing a lot more.
Note I don't have an account on linux.com nor do I plan on having one and that's the only reason I'm posting as anonymous... I can be reached at: ruskie mages.ath.cx Put the two toghter to get my email<nobr> <wbr></nobr>:) Don't forget the @...
I got some of this info from my own experience and some by running a quick freshmeat seach for pdf viewer...
Doesn't seem very researched...
Posted by: Anonymous Coward on November 28, 2006 08:41 PMThis is patialy wrong gpdf is another one that can be used through the mozilla-bonobo plugin.
Also this article seems to be very unresearched. It lacks to mention gpdf, epdf(still experimental but it works, based on the E Fundation libraries)(there is also EPDF - eiffel based pdf creation library), svp(doesn't seem to be active but svgalib based), gspdf(gnustep app). And I'm guessing a lot more.
Note I don't have an account on linux.com nor do I plan on having one and that's the only reason I'm posting as anonymous... I can be reached at:
ruskie
mages.ath.cx
Put the two toghter to get my email<nobr> <wbr></nobr>:) Don't forget the @...
I got some of this info from my own experience and some by running a quick freshmeat seach for pdf viewer...
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