Creating PDFs from almost any application

April 28th, 2010

How to save a PDFPDF stands for “Portable Document Format”, and what makes a PDF document practical is that it is universal – anyone on any computer, Mac or PC, can open it, without having the software originally used to create it. It can’t be modified by anyone; it’s essentially a picture of the page.

That means you can save a Pages document in a format your friend on a PC can read. It also means you can send a contract created in Word, and the recipient can’t change it and claim that’s how it was originally.

PDFs are saved like any other file, and can also be organized in iPhoto or Aperture.

To convert a document to PDF format, simply go to the Print dialog box.* In the lower right-hand corner, there will be a PDF button. Click on it, and you’ll have a variety of options, not just for the conversion, but for the action you want to do with it as well.

Choose “Save as PDF…” to convert to PDF and save it on your hard drive for archiving, or future use.

“Open in Preview” will immediately let you see what it looks like.

“Mail PDF” will open up Apple Mail and instantly attach the file, so all you have to do is address it and send it!

“Save as Adobe PDF” gets it ready to be modified in Adobe Acrobat, if you’ll be using it as the basis for an interactive form.

“Save PDF to Aperture” and “Save PDF to iPhoto” will instantly add the file to your photo library. You can then assign it keywords, ratings, and move it into albums. These choices are a great way of creating an archive of important records.

“Save PDF to folder as JPG (or TIFF)” turns the document into a graphic image.

“Save PDF to Web Receipts Folder” from either Mail or Safari allows to create digital receipts to track online purchases.

Once your document is saved as a PDF, its universal file format will allow you to use it in any way you’d like!

*If your print dialog box is very small, click the blue arrow to the right of the printer name to expand it out.

The fastest, most powerful MacBook Pro ever. Times three.

April 21st, 2010

The new MacBook Pro, available in 13-, 15-, and 17-inch models, sets all-new benchmarks for Mac notebooks. The 15- and 17-inch MacBook Pro feature Intel Core i5 and Core i7 processors, which boost performance up to 50 percent and reach Turbo Boost speeds up to 3.33GHz. Next-generation NVIDIA graphics bring high performance to everything from 3D games to photos and videos. And the built-in battery lasts up to 10 hours (8 to 9 hours on the 15- and 17-inch models). Starting at $1199.