Fred_4, exactly what about my previous comment led you to erroneously conclude that I am a PDF noob? I'll have you know that I got in on the ground floor of PDF form creation and completion when I started working in Congress in 1988 and in the White House between 1992 and 2000. During those years I must have created at least 100 PDF forms for download from one government website or another (mostly using Acrobat), plus I must have downloaded and filled out at least 200 more PDF forms on my own. And while still working in the White House I pursued advanced degrees, and in 2000 I earned a Ph.D. and began a new career as a geography professor at a Midwestern state university until I moved to the California Sate Univ. system and earned tenure in 2006. And in all that time I have been completely dependent on federal, state and nonprofit organization grants to pay for my research, professional associations, conferences and travel (to 37 countries now), and in this phase of my professional life I have probably filled out another 200 PDF forms so far, but since 2001 I have used mostly third party PDF applications in order to extricate myself from the fetid bosom of Adobe. So I think I know a thing or two about PDF creation and manipulation.
However, you make a good point. It is annoying when you download a form that wasn't setup correctly for us to fill out on our computers, and PDFPen Pro is a very good app that address this problem in a simple way. However, I don't think PDFPen is worth $50, and PDFPenPro isn't worth $100. Maybe $10 and $20, but $50 and $100 is just outrageous. Instead, I can use one or two freeware apps to do pretty much anything you can do with PDFPenPro.
For instance, if I download a form that was badly setup, with no fields in which to enter text, I just use the great freeware, open source app Formulate Pro to create my own text boxes and other shapes, then I type in my info and save it as a PDF document using Apple's brilliant built-in PDF creation function (Print > Save As PDF). Formulate Pro is a very simple app that's still in beta even after nearly 2 years, because nobody is paying its selfless open source developers, but it does the same text and graphics overlaying for FREE that PDFPen Pro charges you $100 for! Of course PDFPenPro does it prettier and with more customization options available, but for most people and even most businesses, that's not worth $100 when there's a free alternative. After overlaying text boxes, graphics or whatever else I need to do to make downloaded forms editable, if I need to do anything fancier, like move pages around within the document, or add my own markup edits, etc., I can use one of the other 2 great freeware apps -- Skim and Preview. In fact, the combination of Formulate Pro and either Preview or Skim is only slightly less convenient and efficient that just using one app, like PDFPen Pro, even if I had to do it every day for work.
So you see Fred, I'm not a noob, I'm just exactly the opposite!
If you're interested, here are the links for Formulate Pro and Skim:
http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/33391
http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/32667
PDFpenPro
Split, combine, reorder PDFs; overlay/edit images/text in PDFs.
Version: 4.5.2
Here's 3 free apps that do the same things as PDFPenPro
Feedback Type: Commentary
Contributed by: Kudrabar Thursday, April 30 2009 @ 01:42 AM PDT
Product Platform: MacOSX
Used Product For: Over One Year
Recommend Product: NO
Comments
Here's 3 free apps that do the same things as PDFPenPro - Scoth on the Rocks
If you used it everyday for work, what 50 or even 100 bucks. The people that make this stuff need to make money. I don't know anyone who likes to work for free.Tuesday, July 14 2009 @ 06:51 PM PDT
Here's 3 free apps that do the same things as PDFPenPro - awaMan
Whoever you are, your bio and ego are irrelevant. I'm tenured at a Japanese university. So what?Thank you for the relevant information about similar products.
PDFpen Pro does what it says and works well enough for me; I prefer it to Adobe's Reader and Digital Editions for reading PDF books, as it is easy to add notes and chapters, although it can be slow to save. It handles Unicode well (important for Japanese) and is updated regularly.
I am smart enough that I had my employer buy this for me. Perhaps when I first began using this years ago as PDFpen before upgrading to Pro, I even got an academic price.
Sometimes a well-credentialed noob is the same as an arrogant boob.
Saturday, September 12 2009 @ 03:26 AM PDT
Here's 3 free apps that do the same things as PDFPenPro - Kudrabar
Fred_4, I just realized that I wrote my response to your comment under a different username. I, Kudrabar, am also Jay.Reply to This
Thursday, April 30 2009 @ 01:51 AM PDT