tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7554983191417953752.post5372602342309259333..comments2024-01-11T22:57:20.597-06:00Comments on Texas [Ed]Tech: Geek in the House: Two Minute Tech - PDFSplit & PDFMergeNicholas Keithhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10781312423467120158noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7554983191417953752.post-40021056149848782452015-10-15T22:26:05.289-05:002015-10-15T22:26:05.289-05:00Thanks, John, I wasn't familiar with PDFMergy,...Thanks, John, I wasn't familiar with PDFMergy, definitely going to try it out. And I hadn't thought about using "Print to PDF" to pull out certain pages. Clever little workaround there...Nicholas Keithhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10781312423467120158noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7554983191417953752.post-36877746573407868512015-10-15T21:18:15.360-05:002015-10-15T21:18:15.360-05:00Hello, Nick:
Thanks for this write-up. I agree ...Hello, Nick: <br /><br />Thanks for this write-up. I agree that PDFs will be around and they're not the easiest to deal with. I wanted to mention two other PDF-related tools I use a LOT<br /><br />- PDFMergy is a Google Docs add-on that lets you select any number of PDF files in your drive (or computer) and merge them into one.<br /><br />- Standard on a Mac is the 'Preview' tool - for opening PDFs. For giant PDFs, I often select the pages I want (choose them from the sidebar or select a print range), then do Command+P to do a print. In the lower left of the dialog is a "PDF" button. Instead of printing my pages, I just save them into a new PDF. You can do this from the Chrome print dialog as well by selecting "Save as PDF". <br /><br />Thanks for all the tech tips!JohnPhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00552135216325430470noreply@blogger.com