One of my favorite features of Mac OS X is how PDF (portable document format) tools are tightly integrated into the operating system. Want to save something as a PDF document? Any app that can send a document to the printer, be it a Web page, a screen capture, or a nicely formatted report, can just as easily do a “Save As PDF”, and even specify what image quality should be used. Sure, Adobe sells its Distiller program, but on a Mac I would estimate that 95%+ of your document to PDF requirements are already included in the operating system.
This capability is completely missing from the Windows world, whether you’re running Windows XP, Vista or Windows 7. It’s just not the same. This means that if you want to work with PDF files, you’re going to need to spend some money getting a commercial application that adds this set of features to your PC.
That’s why I was interested in learning more about Smart PDF Converter Pro when the company contacted me. I switch back and forth and quite often find that it’s very useful to send an unmodifiable document to a client or customer, a PDF rather than a Word file or HTML page. Testing Smart PDF Converter Pro? Sure!
The good news is that the application is fast, easy to use, and has a lot of useful features. To test it I dropped it into my HP laptop running Windows 7, and grabbed a sample PDF document off the net, a document entitled “China’s Video Game Industry Annual Review”.
What I wanted to do was use Smart PDF Converter Pro to extract all the text from the PDF file and convert it into a Microsoft Word document that I could then utilize as a source if I were working on a report on the same subject. In addition, I wanted to test whether you could add SPCP as a print device and access it from anywhere within the Windows system.
In both instances the application worked perfectly.
Once the program is installed, a few new options show up in the contextual menu when you’re looking at a PDF file, as shown:
I choose “Convert” and without any further clicks or action, it launches and converts the PDF document into a Word file:
How’d it do? Here’s that PDF as a Word doc, as converted by Smart PDF Converter Pro:
Not bad at all. Notice it retained font colors, typefaces, and styles rather than just a dumb text dump.
Wondering what other formats you can convert that PDF into with the app? Here’s a list:
The latest version of Smart PDF Converter Pro has a bunch of other PDF tools, if you need to do more interesting things with your PDF document, either as an extraction or editing or tweaking it:
Still, I have never found I needed those capabilities. What I do want, though, is the ability to print to PDF on Windows, just as I do on my Mac. Without it being an advertised feature, Smart PDF Converter Pro also installs itself as a printer driver, which means if you’re looking at a help page, say, you can print it to a PDF and use that as a reference document:
The wrinkle is price. The retail price of Smart PDF Converter Standard is $39.90, and the Pro version is $69.90. The main difference is that the Standard edition can do most everything shown, except it can’t save things back to PDF format. This might seem expensive until you look at the cost of Adobe’s Distller app, which is a cool $449 if you get the full package.
If you need to gain more control over your work with PDF files on a Windows machine and/or you want to be able to print documents to a PDF conversion utility, then Smart PDF Convert might just be a great solution for you.