Converting documents to PDF is a good way to distribute them. The reader software is free and the documents are clean and usually easy to read. However, sometimes you can run into problems converting the documents. One method is to print the document to the Acrobat printer, which is automatically installed when you install Acrobat 9. If the printer does not work or you are having other problems, you might need to reinstall the printer on your office's Mac. While Mac OS X does not have a dedicated uninstall program, reinstalling software is a straightforward process.
![Acrobat Acrobat](http://www.hostpic.org/images/1510122026100098.jpg)
Hi, First, do realize that Adobe only tested Adobe Reader/Acrobat release 9.2 in Windows 7. Adobe has stated that 9.2 and better will have support for Windows 7. Also, Adobe states that, while releases prior to 9.2 may install and run, there will be no support of earlier releases for Windows 7.
You need a PDF form (a PDF document with fillable fields) and a data file that. Acrobat 9 and before: either use 'Advanced' menu or check software manual for. You would need to know SMTP server settings for the specific server used at.
![Adobe Adobe](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125465636/512994549.jpg)
In context of this, I suspect that you will encounter additional issues while using Acrobat 8.x product in Windows 7. With that said; keep in mind that Acrobat is using what the OS is telling it is the 'default email client'. You'll need to get the OS to provide the correct/desired information. Nothing Acrobat can do; again, it uses what the OS identifies as the correct thing. Compounding this is that Acrobat 8 does not 'speak' Windows 7 OS at all well. We are using Windows 7 but I see people writing of the same problem in Windows Vista and perhaps XP.
Even though the default email program is set via 'Set Program Access and Defaults,' there may still be an incorrect registry entry pointing to Outlook. I haven't tried fixing this yet, but here are some web pages that say how. Do a 'find' on the word 'registry' in the web pages below and you'll see what I'm talking about: I hope this helps someone. Try at your own risk, and remember to back up the registry before you change it. This is what worked for me. No editing of the registry, just a simple setting in Windows 7: I had to do this on my Old XP machine and again on my Vista machine, which I just upgraded to 7 professional.
It boils down to setting Thunderbird as default in a very specific way - even if you think it already is the default, it will only work in this way. I'm using Acrobat Pro 8.0, and it seems to work fine in Windows 7 even though it is not supported.
Here' how: Start Default Programs Set program access and computer defaults Custom (expand this) Choose a default e-mail program Then, click on 'Thunderbird'. 'Use my current email program' won't do it, even if Thunderbird is already your default. I can now email my pdf documents from Acrobat!