This option may be called disable CSS styles or override CSS styles. Many eReaders and apps have an option to allow “publisher defaults”. PDFs automatically just double-click the file.
Wikipedia's "List of PDF Software" includes many free.
It doesn't use the full real estate of the screen, but the page segments jump correctly. In the rush to get it to market, the maker just scaled up a version that works on the iPhone/iPod screen. There is a second 99 cent app which handles the page transitioning somewhat cleanly. It doesn't look like this version of goodreader allows this option, afaik. To be genuinely considered an ereader, the pdf software should behave like epub software, with a nice clean transition in the reading line. Viewing 1:1 is painful due to font rendering. This is annoying, and does not happen with the Sony 300 - 900 readers. Thus your eyes have to catch where the transition is, deciphering the old from the new. When you hit the tapzone on the lower right corner, the reader just fills the bottom of the screen with whatever was missing on a page. Let's suppose you have a page which does not render fully (due to user zooming). One feature I have not figured out yet is a clean form of page advance. Lots of teething pains so far, but the folks who publish Goodreader will probably figure out the cause of the bugs. I also found another missing photo later. Second, on one art book, Nude Photography, by Pascal Baetens, the photograph by André Kertész on page 17 (labeled) or 19 (actual) is MISSING. Same file renders perfectly on a Mac Pro, using latest version of Safari. Example: cosmological constant on page 9 of
First, since it uses the Safari parsing engine, it leaves out math symbols every now and then. I have been playing around with it for the past half day. Since my PDA died, I've been eagerly awaiting a new e-book reader and ALMOST got a Kindle last year. I've never been interested in an Apple product before.
But its the 3rd of April in Australia so I'm guessing people are merely hours away from getting their hands on it. I realise the iPad might not be out right this second. Is there confirmation of an iPad specific app for PDB files? If not, is there an app for them on the iPhone and if so how does it work on the increased screen size of the iPad? Will I be able to read these on an iPad? More specifically, are PDFs handled straight out of the box? If so how does it handle landscape and portrait and scrolling from page to page? If I need to get a 3rd party app for PDF, which app would you recommend? My needs are the ability to read this PDF (free download) and also traditional PDFs. In addition I also have 111 PDF files (most of which I've bought). In that time I bought 95 PDB books that I've been unable to read. About 5 years ago I bought a Palm PDA that eventually broke after three years.