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A Basic Plus account ($7/month, or $60/year) supports unlimited document conversion and five free signatures, while the full Premium package ($21/month, $180/year) throws in unlimited signatures and collaboration. Users can road-test a free Basic Nitro Cloud account, which supports up to five new documents per month for converting, signing or collaborating. Nitro also claims that Nitro Pro 9 displays documents even faster – by up to 30 per cent – than its predecessor. Users can also batch print a selection of PDF files in a specific order.Ī new Outlook plug-in gives users access to key Nitro functionality, namely the ability to convert emails, email folders and attachments to PDF documents, from within Outlook itself. The text-editing tool has also been improved to make it simpler to make changes to individual lines or entire paragraphs without having to switch between editing modes.The spellcheck has also been extended to cover all editable text fields and text-based annotations.Ĭombining documents from multiple sources into a single PDF has also been improved thanks to new visual document assembly tools. A new measurement tool makes it possible to precisely measure distance, perimeter and area in bluerpints, drawings, CAD and other design elements in PDF files. Users can now compare two versions of a PDF – both visually and by content – and output the differences to a separate document. Version 9 also debuts a number of new interesting tools. The new release also debuts an updated look, designed to tie in closely to the new Windows 8/Office 2013 style, and offering users of those applications a gentler learning curve due to the familiarity of Nitro’s interface. Nitro Pro 9 sports a new look and features integration with Nitro’s new cloud-based sharing service.
