PDF Agile Premium is an all-in-one PDF editor that lets you edit, convert, annotate and secure PDFs — and a lifetime license costs just $39.99 right now. We all love it when we find a tool that just ...
Google has removed a whole section from its JavaScript SEO documentation because it was outdated and Google says loading content with JavaScript does not make it hard for Google Search. Google wrote ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. is an investigations editor and feature writer covering technology and the people who make, use, and are affected ...
Google has added three new features to the Chrome desktop browser, including split view for multitasking, PDF annotations, and a Save to Google Drive option. Split view for Chrome is a built-in tool ...
Google is officially announcing a trio of new desktop Chrome productivity features today: Split View, PDF annotation, and Save to Google Drive. Up first is Split View to have two tabs open ...
A new phishing scheme aims to trick organizations into giving up their Dropbox logins using a multistage obfuscation strategy. Data security vendor Forcepoint on Monday published research concerning ...
PDF readers and open-source libraries used in document processing will all need updating to handle the Brotli compression filter. Brotli is one of the most widely used but least-known compression ...
For this week’s Ask An SEO, a reader asked: “Is there any difference between how AI systems handle JavaScript-rendered or interactively hidden content compared to traditional Google indexing? What ...
Why it matters: JavaScript was officially unveiled in 1995 and now powers the overwhelming majority of the modern web, as well as countless server and desktop projects. The language is one of the core ...
Free software on your phone or tablet lets you scan, create, edit, annotate and even sign digitized documents on the go. By J. D. Biersdorfer I write the monthly Tech Tip column, which is devoted to ...
Enterprise users know by now that they shouldn’t click on suspicious-looking links or download strange files. But what about innocuous, ever-present PDFs? Researchers at security company Varonis have ...