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What about PDF?
Almost everyone has the free Adobe Reader or Acrobat. Regulated industries where forms are so prevalent, like banking an insurance, rely on PDF forms used over the Web. PDF is ultra-secure and look like their hard-copy counterparts. For our company, it's all about security and create once - publish anywhere. A PDF form can be created with Adobe Form Designer and rendered as HTML or XML, and of course in hard copy exactly as we want it to look. Not sure Xforms can do that. How many different forms will we need to code?
Posted by: mrozen@...   Posted on: 02/17/05 You are currently: a Guest | Members login | Terms of Use

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What about PDF?  mrozen@... | 02/17/05
Different form definition  seosamh_z | 02/17/05
PDF is a lot more than just printing. It could concievable work.  DonnieBoy | 02/18/05
PDFs...  Patrick Jones | 02/18/05
But aren't PDFs...  rapson | 02/18/05
Why not standardize the interfaces for the form controls?  Hugh Jass | 02/17/05
You are kind of describing what they want to standardize.  DonnieBoy | 02/18/05
Cant Imagine  ParadigmOdyssey | 02/17/05
why not...  jdahs@... | 02/17/05
They just might standardize a couple of kinds.  DonnieBoy | 02/18/05
Once again this is not about e-business...  mlindl | 02/18/05
Please - Dont Give MS the Wheel...  dzash2000 | 02/18/05
No standards needed at all  coder_z | 02/18/05
People in the Military would like to use common web sites.  DonnieBoy | 02/18/05
This is a very, very, important battle for Microsoft.  DonnieBoy | 02/18/05
maybe for Microsoft...  Dave F_z | 02/19/05
OASIS OpenDoc Uses XForms  garyedwards@... | 02/18/05
W3C too slow  __howard__ | 02/21/05

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