johnsemlak said:
I think that's a bit of harsh exaggeration. I don't like the new format (from what I know about it so far), but come on, they're not treating you like a criminal.
It's an extension of the phrase, "If you outlaw a thing, the only people doing a thing will be outlaws."
The people who are going to care enough to respect the DRM encryption aren't the problem, and yet they are getting the (extremely) short end of (the extremely sharp) stick (in the eye).
The people who don't care, still wont.
For what it's worth, any company that goes this route has lost me as a customer too. Sorry Monte.
1) I don't like registering products just to give a bajillion more corporations information that is none of their bloody buisness and inevitably that information will find some way to wind as spam or needless headache for me.
2) I don't use windows exclusivly on my desktop, and I don't use windows *at all* on my laptop, which as pointed out, has no Adobe Acrobat 6.
3) Further, neither my laptop nor the computer in my gaming room has any form of an internet connection, so I have to transfer things via CD to them (Well, I can trasfer via network to my laptop, but thats a pain to set up for a single file). Which as I understand it is going to shaft me even if there WAS a working DRM-enabled reader for linux.
4) I refuse to jump through hoops in terms of registering for a new service, following all the 'simple procedures' for getting the stuff to work, only to have a product that doesn't work right (I consider having features disabled to 'not work right').
5) It adds *no value* to the customer, it actually *subtracts value*, as you are getting a feature-limited, track-able, registration-required, limited-portability (if you exist outside of the Wintel framework) product.
Hopefully this service will die swiftly, the company doing this will go bankrupt and never be heard from again, and things will go back to the way they were soon.
Sorry if that sounds harsh, but this really irks me. I was just starting to grow to like PDF publishing.