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Google Google Docs Linux PDF Utility Windows

Use Google Docs as a Batch PDF Converter

If you have multiple Word Documents, Excel Spreadsheets and PowerPoint Presentations that you would like to convert into PDF at once without investing in commercial software like Adobe Acrobat, try Google Docs.

While it has always been possible to convert Office documents into PDF using Google Docs, the new export feature makes it even easier for you to batch convert Microsoft Office and OpenOffice file formats into PDF (or HTML) in three easy steps.

Step #1 – Create a new “input” folder in Google Docs where you’ll upload all your documents and presentations that are to converted into PDF.

pdf input queue

Step #2
– Now select the Upload Document option in Google Docs, set the destination folder to the one that you created in Step #1 and upload all your documents. Google Docs officially supports the following file formats though you may also upload images:

  • Microsoft PowerPoint (.ppt, .pps).
  • Microsoft Word (.doc, .docx), OpenDocument (.odt) and StarOffice (.sxw).
  • Microsoft Excel (csv, .xls, .xlsx) files and OpenDocument Spreadsheet (.ods).

pdf upload documents

Step #3 –  Once all files are uploaded onto Google Docs, open the dashboard again and select the “input” folder from the right sidebar. Select all the files in this folder and choose “Export” under “More Options”.
Here’s select “PDF” (or HTML) as the output format and all your Word Documents, presentations, spreadsheets, etc. will be instantly converted into PDF.
batch pdf convert

And if you are converting a large batch of documents into PDF, you don’t have to wait in the browser for the conversion to finish as Google Docs will automatically send you an email once the processing is over. The email will have a link from where you can directly download all the PDF files in one large ZIP.

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Download FREE Linux PDF Software Windows

Adobe Acrobat alternatives: Find the best PDF software for you

Working with PDF files is inevitable. Most documents are downloaded in PDF format. You need to get used to working with PDF files and software that lets you do what you want to do with a minimum of fuss.

Adobe Acrobat looks wonderful, and in a perfect world where all software was free, I would recommend using it. However, Acrobat Pro Extended costs around $700. Luckily, there are a number of third party applications that do a lot of the things that Acrobat does. I have created this guide to help you find the best software (or combination of software) to suit your needs (hopefully for free).

The benchmark: AcrobatAdobe Acrobat now comes in three flavors: Standard, Pro, and Pro Extended. Each version introduces more features and is more expensive. Acrobat Pro Extended is the most powerful, feature rich PDF creation program in the world. However, ever since Acrobat 7, I feel that Adobe has introduced many features that have turned Acrobat into a bloated piece of software. I just want a program that makes beautiful PDFs, allows me to comment, markup, and organise my collection. Acrobat is hopeless when it comes to organising your PDF collection. You are better off using iTunes for PDF organisation! Bloated, overpriced, let’s find an alternative.

Acrobat alternatives

  • Nitro PDF Professional – An Acrobat clone that tries to do everything that Acrobat does. At $US99, this is a good value alternative to Acrobat Pro for those who are serious about PDF creation and editing. Nitro PDF allows you to create, edit, comment, and annotate PDF files. You can also convert PDF files to other formats such as .doc, .rtf, .txt and so on. Nitro PDF is aimed at Microsoft Office users, desktop publishers or document management professionals. If you are considering buying it, here is a detailed review.
  • Foxit PDF Editor 2 – Lacks some of the features of the Acrobat alternatives mentioned in this article. It treats everything as images, so resizing a text box will distort the text. At $US99, you would be better off purchasing the superior Nitro PDF.
  • PDF Xchange Pro – An Acrobat clone that tries to do everything. You can edit, crop, markup, create PDFs. At $US70, it’s cheaper than Nitro PDF.PDF Converter 5 – Another Acrobat clone. Create PDFs, combine multiple files into a PDF, convert PDFs into other formats, annotate PDFs. Costs $US99.
  • PDF Fill PDF Editor 6 – Budget Acrobat alternative. $US20. Not sure how good it is. PDF creation looks questionable. Interface looks poor.PDF ToolkitsPDF Tools – Manipulate the structure of PDF files. Merge, remove, rotate, crop pages. Free download.
  • PDF Transformer – A utility that creates OCR PDFs and converts PDF files back into Microsoft Office formats such as Word .doc and Excel .xls.Free PDF printers
  • PDF Creator – Open source. Create PDF from multiple files. Extensive options for customising quality of PDF. Highly recommended.
  • Primo PDF – Create PDFs from multiple files.Embed fonts. Easy to use interface. This is my favourite free PDF printer.
  • Cute PDF – Free printer driver. Requires GhostScript to run.
  • doPDF – Free printer driver. Does not require GhostScript.

Free PDF viewers

  • Adobe Reader – A free download from Adobe’s website. Very popular software that has become bloated in recent versions. The installer for Reader 9.0 is 33.5MB! There are faster and better alternatives.
  • Foxit PDF Reader – A popular Adobe Reader alternative. Loads very quickly. The installer is under 3MB! Better than Adobe viewer for viewing PDF files. Commenting features are limited in the free version.
  • PDF Xchange Viewer – It is a fast PDF viewer that allows the user to markup, comment, highlight and annotate PDF files, which in my opinion makes it better than Foxit Reader.