Google Builds a Native PDF Reader Into Chrome 285
An anonymous reader writes "Google's latest Chrome 6 Developer Update comes with a few subtle GUI changes, but there is also a major update under the hood. As its ties with Adobe quite apparently grow stronger, there is not just an integrated Flash player, but also a native PDF reader in the latest version of Chrome 6. Google says the native reader will allow users to interact with PDF files just like they do with regular HTML pages. The reader is included in Chrome versions (Chromium) 6.0.437.1 and higher, and you can use the feature after you have enabled it manually in the plug-ins menu. That is, of course, if you can keep Chrome 6 alive — Windows users have reported frequent crashes, and Google has temporarily suspended the update progress to find out what is going on." The Register has some more details on the PDF plugin and a link to Google's blog post about it.
PDF files will render as seamlessly as HTML? (Score:4, Insightful)
Does this mean that the PDF pages are translated into HTML pages then displayed? I always thought that one of the main strengths of PDF was that the author has 100% control over how it is presented. Or am I misunderstanding that feature?
Chrome, you're losing me! (Score:3, Insightful)
I started using Chrome because it was an improvement over the other browsers. It was faster, it used less memory, and it was more crash-resistant. But I have not been impressed with the latest versions.
Everyone knows about them removing http:// from the URL bar already. Their reasoning was, to put it politely, complete horseshit. That was a change they never should have made.
Embedding Flash natively is good for YouTube, no doubt, but bad for everyone who doesn't want to support or use something that is so shitty and proprietary.
One of the last things I ever wanted was native PDF support in my browser. Just like with Flash, I go out of my way to avoid PDFs.
As much as I dislike proprietary software, these recent Chrome developments are driving me to Opera. Opera is faster than Chrome, manages memory better, and never crashes. While their code isn't open source, at least they embrace open and truly free standards. Until the Chrome developers get their acts together, I'm done with it.
Yay? (Score:4, Insightful)
PDF is actually a useful standard when it comes to reproducing printed or printable documents. The worst thing about PDF is Adobe's Reader implementation. Hopefully, this is a clean implementation, not based on Adobe's lousy, slow, insecure Reader code. I know they say its sandboxed, but still.
Anyone using Safari or Firefox (extension here [mozilla.org]) on the Mac has been able to do this for some time; PDFs are a lot better without the Adobe plugin.
Re:Chrome, you're losing me! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:PDF plugin, OK. PDF built-in? Not so sure... (Score:0, Insightful)
I haven't noticed the size of Acrobat in a long time. I switched to foxit reader so that the reader opens and I can view the PDF before I die.
Re:Chrome, you're losing me! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:PDF is fat (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Old technology (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:PDF files will render as seamlessly as HTML? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:PDF files will render as seamlessly as HTML? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, because a web page should look exactly the same on my smartphone as it does on my 1080p display....
I don't think the OP understands the purpose of a markup language, a browser, or the idea the pages should render gracefully on different devices. And that's okay so long as he's not a Web developer.
Re:Chrome, you're losing me! (Score:4, Insightful)
There's more than one person amongst the geek community. People can have differing opinions even when identifying under a common label. Shocking, I know.
Chrome is not an application, it's a widget. (Score:1, Insightful)
Let me known when they figure out how to add a menu bar. Until then, I'll be sticking with Firefox.
LK
Re:Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
Adobe's big applications (Photoshop, Premier, etc) are quite good. The problem with Adobe PDF is not a lack of resources, skill or competence on the part of Adobe programmers. The problem is that a PDF reader/creator should be a small simple program, but some pointy haired boss somewhere constantly demands the addition of more and more "features" that are inappropriate, make the program ridiculously bloated and frequently lead to numerous sercurity flaws.
Google Policy on Automatic Updates (Score:5, Insightful)
I've experienced Chrome crashes too - more frequently than IE or Firefox. And that's a big problem with Chrome: You can't turn off Automatic updates(*). You will find several hundred meg vanishing from your download quota. I guess the Google developers with their top-of-the-line hardware forget that us regular folks care about things like bandwidth, disk space (it leaves the downloaded files sitting on your hard drive - multiple versions) and quotas (because I don't want to go over my peak quota because some punk program won't take directions). It also jumps up and starts downloading and installing even if you're in the middle of something.
I'd rather schedule my own updates to fit my own schedule - I don't want some program stuffing up when I'm in the middle of something. Chrome has some nice features - it's fast and it doesn't waste the screen space or have the memory bloat that Firefox or IE do, but Chrome crashes a lot and in the end I figured Firefox was best because it at least gives you some control over your PC. Chrome doesn't.
* = Google do provide a way for Enterprise users to modify the groups policy because (as described in their faq) 'enterprises should be able to schedule their own updates'. But Joe Public doesn't get that luxury, and there's no checkbox to turn it up like every other software is decent enough to provide. BTW don't try the REGEDITS; they don't work. Google know about all this because there are many posts complaining about it (search for 'disable chrome automatic updates'), but in the usual corporate arrogance won't even acknowledge the problem: pesky customers! Google think they know what's best.
http://www.google.com/search?q=disable+chrome+automatic+updates [google.com]
Re:PDF files will render as seamlessly as HTML? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:PDF files will render as seamlessly as HTML? (Score:4, Insightful)
I think you are. PDFs aren't read-only. PDFs aren't secure (well, unless you have some DRM package installed, and even then it's debatable). PDFs will, in the absence of anything else, present like the author wanted. But they are easily edited, modified, redacted, and such. I know people that think "If I send it as a PDF, they won't be able to just copy the text off it, and they can't just change a couple things in it and send it on to someone else like it was mine." Both are incorrect. So yes, you are misunderstanding that feature. It is so that you know they can open it, not that you know they can't modify it. Those are unrelated issues, and it just happens that most people don't bother to get programs that let them modify PDFs and they aren't necessarily easily modified, so they aren't modified regularly in practice.
6 already? (Score:5, Insightful)
Geez, it seems like I was just upgraded to 5 last week.
Re:PDF files will render as seamlessly as HTML? (Score:3, Insightful)
LINK to scifi.com in 1996 - http://web.archive.org/web/19961124030947/http://scifi.com/ [archive.org]
Fast loading (even on dialup). Clean. Easy to use
.
Re:PDF is fat (Score:3, Insightful)
How exploitable is/was doc? MS's implementations usually asked you if you wanted to run macros and had macro settings. I can't think of any trojans or botnets that scaled to huge numbers by exploiting doc. Adobe reader? Yes, lots. Adobe's Reader out of the box runs js without even a warning. Its one of the largest exploitable apps on the internet today and most people have its plugin running in their browser.
Unfortunately, scripting in documents isn't going away anytime soon. In the meantime, can't I get some sane defaults?
I hope all the major browsers start implementing their own PDF reader just to balkanize the PDF market. At least this will hurt the Adobe monopoly and hopefully force them to compete on security and not unsecure features.
Re:PDF files will render as seamlessly as HTML? (Score:4, Insightful)
> Then there is fonts. Heck there are web browsers that run on text terminals.
> Fonts are likely to be substituted depening on the platform and the
> particular install which will also affect the sizing of stuff.
Font sizes are also sometimes much larger than the 2pt that Web designers adore because some of us have less than perfect eyesight.
Re:Chrome is not an application, it's a widget. (Score:3, Insightful)
What do you need the menu bar for that the two menu icons in Chrome can't provide?
Those two icons do not provide a menu bar. It's been a standard part of a GUI for 25 years.
LK
Re:You did not RTFA either (Score:2, Insightful)
I think you have the wrong library. There is no way Google used an unknown, anonymous, 9-year-old C library. Even a newbie hacker could likely exploit that with little effort.
I already hava a PDF Viewer (Score:3, Insightful)
Internet is a highly dangerous place and it's very hard, if not impossible, to secure the browser only for HTML, CSS, JavaScript and DOM. But now Google makes the same mistake like MS with the IE (with ActiveX) and includes PDF in the core browser? PDF is a monstrous standard; the hackers can even hack a stand alone PDF viewer to run code on your computer and now you want to include it in the core Chrome? What's next, ActiveX?
Leave it in a additional Addon for that people who just can't just download a PDF and open it in the stand alone PDF viewer.
Re:Chrome, you're losing me! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:PDF files will render as seamlessly as HTML? (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually the separation of presentation and content is pretty good on most of the bigger sites, i.e. you can switch to "View/Page Style/Basic Page Style" in Firefox and things will look just "fine", they have all their <ul>'s and <h2>'s marked up properly.
The much bigger problem is that the presentation information itself isn't very flexible, instead it consists of ugly hacks and expectation of pixel-perfect exact rendering on every browser. If you change little details like the font-size almost all webpages will completly fail. Some will fail mildly (on Slashdot the Reply button will fall apart) while others will fail catastrophically (overlapping and thus unreadable text). CSS is simply extremely crappy when it comes to creating robust layout, as soon as some small parameter changes, it might result in an unusable webpage, which is why the user is left with the choice between no style at all and pixel perfect rendering as intended by the author, while most of the time you really would want something in between.
Re:PDF files will render as seamlessly as HTML? (Score:3, Insightful)
It worked, and continued to work just fine for any other browser and it passed W3C's validator which you don't see too many do - you'd see the alt numbers in Lynx and if you scale both images and text there was no layout problem. The calendar would be somewhat more blurry on other browsers because you'd be zooming an image and not a truetype font, but still usable. It's funny that you think I don't know about other browsers, the reason I don't talk about those is that all the others just work - Firefox, Safari and Opera did just fine while IE took a ton of hacks in addition to that one. The users were on a computer lab where some administrator had thought that forcing larger text as default due to monitor size would be a good idea, and I'm sure that for the main text it was fine but it completely broke everything that came out of the box on that CMS. Our job was to implement a CMS, not spend ten times their budget trying to rewrite it. But in the land of fairies and unicorns and clients with endless pockets I'm sure we would have... let me guess, you've defintively never done this for a living?
using a browser to display documents? (Score:4, Insightful)
using a browser to display documents with complex layouts, fonts, images, etc? What a novel idea, I don't know how nobody thought of this sooner. Seriously, the main reason why I hate PDF is that I need a separate program to open them, when they're just a glorified webpage.
I wonder why they don't just build this as a native client plugin, and use it on-demand when a pdf shows up, instead of making a big deal about how it's "built in".
Re:Chrome is not an application, it's a widget. (Score:3, Insightful)
Why use a confusing picture (Wrench and Piece of paper?) when perfectly clear text can be used.
Similarly, should I have all my mp3's in one folder, or should I have subfolders by artists and albums, or some other criterion for example?
Anyways, that's why I like the traditional "file edit view history bookmarks tools help" interface. Faster and more organized IMHO
Re:PDF files will render as seamlessly as HTML? (Score:2, Insightful)
> Then there is fonts. Heck there are web browsers that run on text terminals. > Fonts are likely to be substituted depening on the platform and the > particular install which will also affect the sizing of stuff.
Font sizes are also sometimes much larger than the 2pt that Web designers adore because some of us have less than perfect eyesight.
The designer we used almost cried when I changed his proposed 9px Arial to 13px Verdana ;-)
I used the MUM test... if my mum had to put on reading glasses, the font was too small...
Re:Chrome is not an application, it's a widget. (Score:5, Insightful)
Why use a confusing picture (Wrench and Piece of paper?) when perfectly clear text can be used.
The wrench has been a universal configuration icon as long as we've had icons. In fact, using a wrench to denote the storage of tools predates computers considerably. The truly crafty would drill holes in a crappy wrench, add standoffs, and use it as the handle for a tool drawer. Windows 7 includes a wrench icon for configuration on most notifications. Similarly, a picture of a document has been the symbol for document manipulation as long as we've had icons as well; and further, it has long been present on toolbars.
Or, short form, if you are confused by a wrench and a piece of paper, you are a pathetic tool user. Get off my lawn, if you can manage to walk in a straight line.
Similarly, should I have all my mp3's in one folder, or should I have subfolders by artists and albums, or some other criterion for example?
It's not similar. And BTW, if your filesystem doesn't suck, and your player has decent metadata support, it doesn't matter how you store your mp3s as long as you use a naming convention that supports them all being in the same place.
Anyways, that's why I like the traditional "file edit view history bookmarks tools help" interface. Faster and more organized IMHO
But you're wrong. It's slower and less organized. Menus are piles of functions loosely grouped. Chrome's interface is designed to show you the controls you commonly need. Do you really need to go to the edit menu for copy/cut/paste? Everyone I know knows the keyboard shortcuts, even my artist/chef lady love has managed to get those down, and when she forgets them, she uses the context menu, which is the second place you should go. The menu is a distant third (largely because it is distant) and you don't need to go there except to change encoding or report a bug, two things done very infrequently. I use the wrench menu slightly more often because I like to mess with extensions, but everything commonly used in there has a keyboard shortcut or an interface button... except the bookmarks button, for which you need an extension [google.com].