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iPubsoft JPEG to PDF Converter 2.1 esteve disponível como oferta em 26 de julho de 2015
iPubsoft JPEG to PDF Converter pode converter imagens de JPEG para PDF, preservando o formato original da foto de forma realista sem qualquer modificação ou destruição. O JPEG não é realmente um formato conveniente ou seguro, se compararmos com o PDF. O PDF é o formato ideal para armazenar arquivos de imagem em um dispositivo com qualquer resolução de tela. Após converter o JPG para PDF, você terá o benefício de proteger seus arquivos com as opções de segurança do PDF.
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Windows 2000/ 2003/ XP/ Vista/ 7/ 8
25.8 MB
$29.95
Quickly make your own PDF files from TXT, Word (.docx), Image (JPG, PNG, BMP, GIF, TIFF, etc.), MOBI, CHM and HTML.
Build ePub eBooks from 5+ popular formats, such as .doc, .pdf, .html, .txt, .mobi, etc. Output the standard eBook format compatible with most popular eReaders. The program provides Batch conversion of more than one file to ePub at one time, retaining the original text, layout, tables, images, etc. after conversion.
Backup data from Android devices to PC in one click with 100% quality. The program restores all contacts, SMS, mediafiles and more from computer. It transfers music, photos and videos from computer to any Android device.
Recover deleted, formatted, lost data from Android phones/tablets caused by accidental deletion, formatting, software crash, etc. The software allows to preview lost data before you start the data recovery process.
Efficient tool that copies various files from iOS devices to computer. It will help you to use Apple devices as normal portable hard drives. Useful thumbnail and list view modes make it easy to view target files, and quick search tool helps to find a file with the correct file name.
Comentáriosrios do iPubsoft JPEG to PDF Converter 2.1
Please add a comment explaining the reason behind your vote.
Installed and registered without problems on a Win 8.1.3 Pro 64 bit system. A clean install.
A Chinese company from Shenzen with address:
"Established in 2009, iPubsoft Studio is a leading consumer software provider. In recent years, iPubsoft has extended its business worldwide, consistently dedicated to satisfy customers with diversified consumer software products and services."
And the typical mission/vision statements, from the Big HandBook of Statements:
" Our Values
People-oriented, Sincerely unit, Hard struggle, Innovation, Happy life."
The latest entry in the blog from April 2014, about the same date, this software has.
This software does WHAT??? It converts picture format to a PDF. What else? Nothing, nil, nada...
Upon start a small non resizable window opens, terrible German translation full with errors. In the options you can switch language, define the page settings, document description and password.
http://i.imgur.com/a7P4xE2.png
You add your files, you can convert these from PDF to PDF..., merge into one file and start:
http://i.imgur.com/itH9kFw.png
The output is a simple PDF, missing the author name, which was entered in the preferences. The conversion is done with
wkhtmltopdf. This file and the origin is obfuscated as a h2p.exe in the programs bin directory. No credits found to:
http://wkhtmltopdf.org/
http://i.imgur.com/LJImQUM.png
Think, what you want.
Uninstalled via reboot through DeepFreeze,
Arrows and marks in the screenshot with the built in Greenshot editor.
Have nice Sunday
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This converter seems to be a part of Coolmuster PDF Creator Pro by coolmuster.com (http://www.coolmuster.com/pdf-creator-pro.html)
It does exact the same conversion for some jpg files in my tests.
http://imgur.com/mk1E1tS
As often before : a company comes as a MP (Multiple Personality)...
There is a much better free tool for doing image (JPG, GIF or BMP) to PDF conversion:
http://www.pdfforge.org/images2pdf
because it can retain the original image size in the final PDF or can fit them into a paper format you define.
ipubsoft just gives options for most common print sizes.
Mona
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Baffling single-purpose app killed stone dead by a silly re-install price of $29.95, iPubsoft JPEG to PDF Converter seems to be an answer to a question never asked and a solution to a problem never encountered.
According to the developer, the product's raison d'etre stems from the fact that JPEG is not really convenient or secure file format compared to PDF. According to me: utter hooey. Of course it's convenient. If it wasn't, nobody would be using it. As to security:
It would take me mere moments to zip a clutch of jpegs together in a folder and encrypt that zip. Software used? 7Zip or PeaZip. Both are freeware. Alternatively, it would take about the same time to sequentially insert a number of jpegs into a blank Word doc and convert to pdf. Software used? Bullzip. It's freeware. And alternatively to that: I could just chuck all the jpegs into a Safehouse vault and lock it up and hide it away. (Safehouse is freeware.)
None of my jpegs give me cause for concern over "convenience" or "security" so I won't be doing any of the above. Nor will I be needing the batched image conversion which iPubsoft JPEG to PDF Converter claims to be able to undertake, seeing as how Irfanview has been around for years and does all -- and much more -- for free.
Thanks, GOTD, and thanks, too, to iPubsoft, but no thanks. As freeware, this app could've had some curiosity value but at a potential $29.99 re-install price, no chance.
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It's been a long time since I voted for a GOTD. So I made a mistake, because I'm curious. I wanted to vote down this GOTD, but then a form appeared asking for a motive to vote down. I thought it would be the same for the vote up, but no. It directly set the vote. This might explain why the votes down are less than before, because I feel not all down voters aren't willing to give a reason. So, the real number of up-voters is 40, not 41, and my guess is this figure is artificially high. This new (for me) vote system isn't bad, but it could be improved by providing a similar form for the up-voters.
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I never understood why people would convert images to PDF anyway. It's adding overhead, it's modifying the intrinsic properties of the object in a way that forbid usages in its original form (i.e. transformations), it limits what you can do with it because you do much less with a pdf than with an image. It does not really protect the image because you can always extract the image (it's possible to crack a password protected pdf); in some cases (e.g. steganography), you have to do so. It reduce usability because an image can always adapt its size to that of the screen. TV don't know pdf yet so forget hosting a vacation picture show for family/friends. Packaging images into a pdf for motives like security, transport or whatever is futile; zipping is a faster solution, you don't need additional 25 MB software (Windows 7 comes with the command line utility "compact").
The product name "JPEG to PDF" is a lie. According to the description it can "convert numerous image formats like JPG, JPEG, GIF, TIF, BMP, ICO, etc. into Adobe PDF." How difficult is it to rename the product?
Asking $30 is kind of megalomaniac given the 2,850,000 hits when googling for "image to pdf converter -free -online -sourceforge -ubuntu" (addng more keywords like -youtube -android in fact multiplies, lol, the result by a factor between 2 and 3).
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Something on this site I noticed today. "sur.ly" is now hidden when you hover on a link! Most links are 404. With the notable exception of imgur although one link to imgur is 404 too because it's filtered by "sur.ly" (bug!).
The way this "sur.ly" thing is handled here poses a few problems ---to me, at least. I know you can obfuscate links, but this method is generally used by untrusty sites. Now that this method is also used by trusted sites, I wonder how many of them hide stuff like this one. It means going through an unknown third-party without consenting to their terms of use. Example: "By accessing the Sur.ly website or using the services offered by Sur.ly you agree and acknowledge to be bound by these Terms of Service. If you do not agree to these Terms, please do not access the Site or use the Services. Sur.ly reserves the right to change these Terms at any time". So, when I click on a link posted by someone in the forum, I access and use sur.ly. When I submit a link, I am, in fact, asking people to implicitly accepts TOS they possibly may disagree with, should they know. One day, they will sell their business to someone with less good intentions (although I don't think "trusted domains", dixit sur.ly, is that much paved with good intentions); the TOS will change dramatically and become unacceptable, but we won't know it.
The Internet is slowly but surely heading towards a model people like me will definitely hate.
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