Adobe Acrobat now works with Google Drive

Adobe Acrobat now works with Google Drive

Working with PDFs in the cloud has become much easier since Adobe announced that Adobe Acrobat is now integrated with Google Drive. This means that more than a billion people who use Google's cloud storage solution to store more than 2 billion digital files can now use Acrobat's PDF tools to create, view, annotate, edit, share and sign. PDF files directly from Google Drive. Existing Acrobat users who also use Google Drive benefit in that they no longer need to switch between applications just to use Adobe PDF tools.

Acrobat for Google Drive integration

With the new Adobe Acrobat integration for Google Drive, anyone can view, search, and annotate PDFs for free. However, Acrobat DC subscribers will be able to create PDF files in Drive, edit and organize existing PDF files, combine multiple file types into a single PDF, send a document for electronic signature and track its progress, export PDF files to Microsoft Word, Excel, Editable, PowerPoint or RTF files and more. Google Drive is not only popular among individuals, but many businesses also rely on Google's cloud storage service. If you have an IT admin in your office, they can easily flip the integration switch for you and your team so you can start working with PDFs right from Drive. According to Adobe, in just a few weeks, IT administrators have already enabled the integration of more than 200,000 employees in large and small companies. Interested users can now install the Adobe Acrobat integration for Google Drive from the G Suite Marketplace.