I have to write this before the Apprentice starts so I'll hurry.
This is a rant about three products, and how they interact - Mozilla Firefox, Adobe Acrobat Reader and Microsoft Windows XP. The problem occurs occasionally while viewing a PDF file in a tab. The browser locks up and and decides to take Windows along with it. The only recourse is rebooting.
In a situation like this, it's hard to place blame. Should I curse Mozilla Firefox as this problem never happens when Internet Explorer is working with Acrobat Reader?! Should I blame Adobe Acrobat for creating a plugin that unfortunately takes too long to load up, loading something like 26 (Look in the Acrobat plugins folder) different plugins itself?! Or should I blame Microsoft Windows XP which gets completely crippled when any process locks up and occupies 99% or more processor time, allowing the UI to become so sluggish that it takes more than 35 minutes (I timed this) to simply bring up the Task Manager so I can kill the offending task?!
Frankly I'm frustrated. I don't feel like giving up Firefox because I like tabbed browsing and Sage too much. Adobe Acrobat is a necessary evil. And Microsoft Windows has developed such a reputation of crashing and freezing that it seems futile to even begin to rant about how a user should always be able to easily kill a process.
Perhaps Robert or Ben have any suggestions or soothing words.
I'm halfway into the Apprentice now and Andy just came up with the Polaroid photo idea.
Why don't you simply disable the Acrobat plug-in?
ReplyDeleteIt's what I do; at least it makes PDFs load in Acrobat (Reader), like they're supposed to, with all the menu options I'm supposed to have...
Go to Tools | Options | Downloads | Plug-ins... and uncheck the PDF plug-ins.