
If you tap on the screen when reading a document, in fact, an elegant and unobtrusive white bar will appear at the top with buttons to search for text, add a bookmark, share and annotate.
#Pdf expert apple pencil pdf
Unlike Readdle’s past App Store experience (ehm, Readdle Docs), PDF Expert comes with a polished UI (they can’t get that download menu right, anyway) especially in the actual reading section. PDF Expert takes seconds to open large PDF documents (tested with a 546-pages ebook, 30MB in size) and scrolling through them is equally fast and smooth. The reason I’m sticking to PDF Expert for my PDF needs, however, is very simple: it combines a fast engine with unique annotation tools that can be carried over to the Mac. Documents can be transferred using iTunes’ file sharing menu as well. Last – speaking of “minor features” – you can also protect documents you don’t want other people to mess with. As you can guess, it also supports iOS’ “Open in…” menu and email sharing – two options I’ve come to love since DEVONthink released its official iPad companion app (and again, more in the next weeks).

I normally store documents on the latter, so I’m perfectly fine with the features offered by the app. PDF Expert, developed by App Store all-star Readdle, can edit documents stored on Google Docs, MobileMe (iDisk) and the usual Dropbox. I want a single place to come back to read and do things with my PDFs.
#Pdf expert apple pencil archive
We’re overwhelmed with alternatives, but now that I’m getting serious about saving stuff in a huge PDF archive (more on this in the upcoming weeks) I want a single app to stick with and forget about the features I could get by combining 3 or 4 apps (people actually suggested this to me). So what I was looking for was a single app capable of pulling documents from Google, MobileMe and Dropbox, rendering them (even the large ones) with a crazy-fast engine and letting me annotate them.

With limited sync features, lack of external services support but overall fast rendering engine, iBooks provided a good alternative to the plethora of Good Reader-like alternatives, but it’s not exactly the most popular apps among PDF die-hard gurus. It turns out students and “pro” users wanted to able to read, organize, upload and annotate their PDF documents, not just read them. PDF reading apps, though, are just a part of the story: annotation is where the money’s at. Especially on the iPad, widely regarded as a perfect reading device, users have been struggling in the weeks after the tablet’s release date to find the ultimate PDF reading app many fell in love with Good Reader and some of them eventually jumped on the updated iBooks bandwagon. When it comes to PDF readers, however, the bar is so high, the alternatives so many and the standards so well-established that it’s not easy to come out with an innovative and powerful product that will make people jump from the app they’re using to a new one. New apps that set new standards and raise an already high bar. And thanks to this “method” (or habit), every once in a while I discover gems that redefine and refine my workflow.

Perhaps that is wrong, as one may be tempted to constantly jump between different softwares just for the sake of having something new to play with (like kids are always attracted by new toys), but I’m firmly convinced I’m doing this because there are hundreds of indie developers that don’t have the resources or the knowledge to virally promote their apps, yet they deserve attention. As you may know, I try a lot of apps every week.
