It may take a little time to make formatting adjustments after converting a PDF to a wordprocessing file, but after it is done, the file is fillable and problem free. The lesson here for Adobe, is that for all of the money it spent developing the program, and for all of the money it spent getting its customers to use and pay for Acrobat, it may have been a better choice for Adobe to have allocated more resources to fix longstanding known bugs, rather than lose customers who, like me, conclude it is easier and better, when dealing with a fillable PDF, just to convert it to a wordprocessing program and avoid using Acrobat altogether. Thankfully, today, after the having the file-save problem that is the subject of this post, and after arriving at my solution of just converting all fillable PDF's to Word or Wordperfect with (which I have never had a saving problem, and in fact, both do automatic backups to prevent the loss of work if there is a problem), I have concluded I can cancel my Acrobat subscription and avoid Acrobat and its associated problems altogether. I called Adobe, and was informed that if I wanted to continue using Acrobat, I had to pay monthy for a subscription. After about one year of use, Acrobat would not let me reinstall the program on a new computer, nor would it update. (It should be noted that years ago, I bought Adobe Acrobat on CD for a pretty hefty price at the time. By doing that, I can avoid using Adobe Acrobat and paying its subscription fee altogether. I know there are many programs that will convert a PDF to a Word or WordPerfect document. After years of having this problem, Adobe has not offered any fix (at least as of the date of this writing). My thoughts and fix: Frankly, while I am empathetic that nothing is perfect, and that glitches will happen which will need attention from time to time to be resolved, from reading the posts, this is neither a new nor infrequent problem. Thus, at least with my document, I believe where a PDF is created and has a signature or a certificate, Adobe's program has what appears to be an intermittent glitch that is not resolvable - at least as far as I can see after four hours of researching possible solitions. I tried a couple of the other proposed solutions in this thread and others as well. The program informed me that the program can't print a document which is either signed or certified (I forget which). Nor did I have any success with printing to a PDF file. Again, saving the exact file that is the subject of my post was not a problem for at least four saves. Following the suggestions in this and other treads, I attempted to organize the pages and extract, but extraction was not an option (the extraction button was faint and unavailable apparently because there is some signature/certification/restriction). I have saved files from the Court previously, and have repeatedly saved, without problems, the particular file that is the subject of my post. Specific Issues: The original fillable PDF came from a California Superior Court's website and is apparently signed or certified in some way. I agree with the original poster that Adobe customer support leaves a lot to be desired, and I agree with the other posters that even if there is an answer, I don't think, as a paid Adobe subsciber, that I should have to plan to spend hours researching and trying a variety of different fixes, and that Adobe should have allocated resources to fix this recurring issue. NONE OF THE PREVIOUSLY POSTED FIXES WORKED.īackground: After spending hours on legal documents that are subject to a deadline (that will be passing today that will likely give me both and ulcer and a stroke if I miss that deadline - and no, it is neither my client's nor my fault), I get a 105 can't read the document error.
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