Adobe Print Driver Plug-in Download For Mac

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Adobe Reader 10.x does go out of it's way to hide the normal print options from OS X but you can still get to them by clicking on the Printer. Button at the bottom of the Adobe Print Dialog and clicking through the warning not to change things behind Adobe's back. I don't have a form like you mentioned in red, but try setting all the print options in Adobe to make your form appear as desired (with or without stamps, annotations, sticky notes and summaries, etc.) and then get to the Apple print dialog to attempt a print to PDF. If Adobe isn't preparing the file for print until after you hit print in the Adobe dialog - then your only recourse is faking it out by defining a new virtual printer. That way adobe is forced to send the data to the mac which will then pop it into a plainer PDF file for you with just the data filled out. I've not resorted to this, but and on making it work with Snow Leopard's sandboxing security looks to be promising.

I hope you don't have to resort to that hacky of a solution to save paper waste and time. I am not sure if this will work for all of the PDF files, but I was having the same issue when printing today. I looked up several solutions and everything seems overly complex. Solutions being download this PDF writer program, or update your adobe version. I went to the PDF file and clicked print, when the print window showed up I went to the Advanced Printer Settings, it had two options to check mark or un check mark. I check marked the 'print file as image' option and it printed.

It took a bit for the printer to start but I worked, everything came out in the correct resolution and none of the colors/text fields were changed. I am sure this won't solve everyone's problem but hopefully it give you another option to try! I found the easiest solution was to take one of my existing printers (a Brother HL-2270DW), and pause it (from Printers and Scanners. Open Print Queue).

Then, print to this printer from Adobe Reader, but since it is paused, it will not print yet, and just queue it up. Once that is done, you can follow similar steps as user65535 above, and grab the raw printer files from /var/spool/cups. The files are named d* and can be either PDF or PS format. If they are PDF, you can open them in Preview directly. If they are PS, then Preview will convert it to a PDF file, and then view it - you can then save this PDF. With these steps, I was able to fill out a form in Acrobat Reader, and then create a PDF that prints properly on my Mac.

I didn't have to install any extra 3rd party software. If you still have problems, using 'Print to image' in Adobe Acrobat will force it to rasterize the printer output.

OK, just throwing another horribly convoluted solution onto the pile. I've found that Amazon's works for converting these PDFs. I happened to have it installed already (so preferable to installing three extra flaky PDF printer drivers which may or may not work in my case), and it worked fine. The difficult was that getting a standalone PDF was needlessly complex.

You can't download a PDF from your Kindle 'Manage your content' page on Amazon (AFAICT), so you have to send it to a third-party device. PDF Documents, including those from the 'Send to Kindle' virtual printer, can be sent to a physical Kindle, or an iOS device's Kindle app, but not, inexplicably, a desktop Kindle app, and also possibly not even an Android device (!). So I had to send to my iPhone. Once it's on your iOS device (or maybe a hardware Kindle, I'm not sure), you can download the document, and then use the 'Share' link to email it to yourself. Basically the steps I used were: • Print to the 'Send to Kindle' printer • Make sure to select 'Archive Document in my Kindle Library' • Browse to the 'Manage your Content' page on Amazon, and wait for the new document to appear in the 'Docs' listing • Deliver the document to your handy iOS device • Open the iOS device and click the share link • Email it to yourself (You might be able to send directly to your iOS device from Send to Kindle.app and avoid step 3 – I couldn't get that to work, but I don't know whether that was significant). Some PDFs (especially forms) can be opened in Adobe but not in other PDF-readers (such as Preview.app, or iOS PDF readers).

But in most cases, you're right - it's fairly useless, which may be why Adobe has gone to such extraordinary lengths to disable the standard 'Print to PDF' feature which you can use in every other OS X app (including, I should note, when you have a PDF open in Preview, so Apple hasn't felt a need to protect us from ourselves in the same way). Less charitably, it could be a way to force everyone to keep using their software. – Dec 29 '14 at 4:08.