23.03.2020

Nomad For Mac

Nomad For Mac 5,8/10 3181 reviews

PDF Nomad is a modern, carefully styled PDF editor, built from the ground up for OS X 10.7 and later. It features a multitude of ways to take your PDF documents from one place to the next, through an easy-to-use interface. It provides often used operations like merging multiple documents, as well as more exotic ones like exporting the document's text as a spoken sound file. Features:. Scan documents directly from your scanner into PDF Nomad.

For

Best Scanners For Apple Computers

Perform OCR on any document (whether scanned or not) to extract its textual contents. Create searchable pages or new pages with the recognized text. Easily resize whole documents to a different page size with a single command, or resize individual pages with drag-and-drop, shifting page contents as needed. Export individual pages as bitmaps (JPG, PNG, etc.) or create spoken audio files from the document's text. Split documents into even/odd pages, or explode documents into single-page PDFs or even into individual chapters. Merge pages side-by-side or on top of each other.

Nomad Mac And Cheese

Split pages in half or tile them to print onto multiple pages to be assembled into posters. Merge documents, interleave documents, and even overlay documents on top of each other. Create and fill out PDF forms. Markup text and annotate pages with rectangles, ovals, arrows, lines, and more.

Add watermarks. Create books and magazines ready for printing. Add finishing/proofing marks if needed. PDF Nomad is blindingly fast, even documents with thousands of pages are laid out in less than a second. Measure line annotations and other shapes. Tutorial videos are available on the SintraWorks website.

Not directly (as of yet, but it's planned), but NoMAD has been recommended here many times already by myself, Kevin and Toby. I am familiar with (meaning, know OF, do not know personally) two of the people on the team at NoMAD, and they have been well-known and extremely well-regarded in the Mac Admin community for last 15 years (at least). I do mean this with respect, but quite emphatically - this a known in the Mac admin community, it's only news to you - or anyone new enough to OS X admin that doesn't already know this:-) As well, in terms of 'legitimacy,' Joel Rennich and Josh Wisenbaker both spent at least a decade (each) working at Apple. Both (Joel Rennich and Josh Wisenbaker) were founders of afp548.com which - for a long time - was THE go-to location on the web for some of the most expert info (or collaborative work to arrive at same) on OS X client & server. Quite seriously, it was the 'Spiceworks' of OS X admin ca. 2002-onward Nothing wrong with afp548.com now (!) but things have changed so very much since then - including the fact that they (Josh & Joel) no longer maintain it (they handed over the reigns to other very knowledgeable folks), changes in OS X, OS X Server, expansion of Apple usage & sites for sharing knowledge of same, Twitter, the MacEnterprise mailing list, the now-retired MacManagers mailing list, the more recent MacAdmins Slack, etc.

Edited May 31, 2018 at 11:41 UTC. I have just deployed NoMAD to our 1 to 1 Macs here (not deployed to the lab computers for obvious reasons). Pushed out the Config Profile with Jamf Pro and then used a policy to install, followed by an email to notify users and explain how to sign in and sync passwords.

Os X Nomad

I stopped binding Macs to AD about 4 years ago, and for me this fills the gap in giving users one password for all work related resources. I plan on utilising some more advanced features moving forward. Would recommend it as an alternative to Binding.