![]() If it does not open, we need to get the error message. If it opens, Acrobat is working as it should. Go to File -> open, and look for a PDF file. I assume Acrobat started and is showing the starting screen. Resolution of that will depend on the error message you get. If it start not, you have a basic problem with Acrobat. When Acrobat started, Acrobat is basically working on your computer. Whe the Acrobat program icon appears, click that.Click the "Start" button and type Acrobat (I assume it still works like in Windows 10).To get to the buttom of the problem, you need first to work the core functionality of the program, and this the "good old way". Also the browser you use is irrelevant to Acrobat in it's core functionality. It doesn't work now.īy is a function of the OS and has basically nothing to do with Acrobat. The double-clicking the pdf always worked in past. And with a beefy 416MHz processor to power it along, it feels nippier than most Windows Mobile phones we’ve used in the past.I was trying to double-click a pdf file and right-clicking the pdf file to open with Adobe Acrobat. To be fair, though, Office document compatibility out of the box is excellent: you get full Office Mobile with the ability to read and create Office 2007 documents, plus a PDF viewer. The touchscreen here is fiddly to use without a stylus and, annoyingly, you can only hook up to one Exchange Server email account at a time. Version 6.1 doesn’t address the age-old problems with Windows Mobile devices either. ![]() Some manufacturers, such as HTC, try to get around this issue by adding their own ‘skin’ on top of Windows Mobile’s ugly front end, but there’s nothing like the Touch Diamond’s TouchFlo 3D here. The HP sports the latest version – 6.1 – but this still looks old-fashioned next to the new whizzy-looking BlackBerryOS 4.6. The latter has a higher resolution, is also much easier to read outside and is fantastically colourful and punchy.īeing a Windows Mobile phone doesn’t help either. It’s not transflective as the E71’s screen is, which means that outside it’s not quite as readable, and neither can it compete with the luxurious display of the Bold. Further investigation reveals, however, that it’s a touchscreen, which does set it apart from both the Nokia and RIM devices.Īgain, however, it falls short. At a standard 320 x 240 resolution it’s not particularly special. Its more angular corners don’t help, while the garish blue characters on some of the keys off-set some of the HP’s more attractive features. It’s a much larger device than the E71 and heavier than both: and that extra weight makes a surprisingly big difference to how pocketable it feels. It even has similar styling cues to the BlackBerry Bold, with attractive strips of silver running, like the frets on an electric guitar, between each row of keys on the keyboard and chrome trim wrapping the front edge.īut elsewhere the 914c has about as much in common with the Nokia and RIM handsets as chalk has with cheese. It has a three-megapixel camera on its rear with an LED flash and portrait mirror. It has tri-band HSDPA for fast mobile broadband connection speeds of up to 3.6 or 7.2Mbps, it has built-in Wi-Fi (802.11bg), an assisted GPS receiver and Bluetooth 2.0. And it’s rammed with about as many features as those two devices as well. At first glance it’s very similar to the Bold and E71, with its Qwerty keyboard and candybar form factor. So it was with some trepidation that we tackled HP’s latest effort – the 914c Business Messenger.
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