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6/2/2008
Adobe Monday announced details of its forthcoming major revision to the entire Acrobat family: Acrobat 9. The company also debuted a new Acrobat.com collaboration beta site and announced an updated Creative Suite (version 3.3), which will incorporate the upcoming Acrobat 9 Pro software.
Acrobat 9 and Creative Suite 3.3
The new versions of Acrobat 9--Acrobat 9 Pro Extended, Acrobat 9 Pro, and Acrobat 9 Standard--incorporate a number of functional and workflow improvements that are designed to expand the range of collaboration tools available to users and broaden support for multimedia.
We spoke with an Adobe education representative, Bob Regan, director of Worldwide K-12, who told us that the new features are particularly geared toward expanding the software's functionality for students in the areas of collaboration and the creation of electronic portfolios.
The process of creating portfolios in Acrobat has been simplified in the new version and includes:
Other new features include:
Significantly, the new version also eliminates the fee for enabling form saving in Acrobat Reader. This will allow users to fill out electronic, PDF-based forms and save those forms with the fields filled out. The form creator no longer has to pay to enable this feature.
Acrobat 9 also enables certain collaborative features available through the new Acrobat.com beta Web site. (See below for more information.)
Acrobat 9 Pro Extended, Acrobat 9 Pro, and Acrobat 9 Standard are expected to ship in July for Windows in English, French, German, and Japanese. The Mac OS X lineup, also slated for July, will not include Pro Extended, but will include Pro and Standard editions. Acrobat 9 Pro Extended will sell for $699; Acrobat 9 Pro will sell for $449; and Acrobat 9 Standard will sell for $299.
Cedarville University in southwestern Ohio has implemented SonicWALL firewalls to provide high-speed gateway firewall protection for its 3,000 students.
The alumni association for the University of North Dakota has gone public with a data breach that occurred when a laptop belonging to a software vendor was stolen from a vehicle. The computer contained the names of 84,000 university alumni, donors, and others, according to coverage by the Grand Forks Herald.
As competition for students increases, colleges and universities are looking more and more to customer (or constituent) relationship management software for help in remaining competitive.
Intercast Networks has redesigned Kazam, its student Internet TV and video service based on the company's VideoXpress platform. Following a spring semester alpha trial at Columbia and Purdue University, the company redesigned Kazam's interface based on student feedback and added additional content that caters to a student audience.
Doctors at Michigan State University have begun using the Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) Services Grid from Acuo Technologies to transport and manage magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) results from a hospital in Malawi, Africa in order to monitor the impact of malaria on children.
Administrators at the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi (IIT Delhi) have gone public with their installation of open source database management software from Ingres. IIT Delhi, one of seven leading institutes of technology in India, adopted Ingres Database to support administration functions such as grading, finance, human resources, procurement, and hospital administration.