The Web browser you are reading this article on is a small wonder of engineering. Its origins can be traced back almost a quarter of a century, and is now one of 100+ available browsers serving over 360 million internet users. With those statistics one can only imagine the rate of change when it comes to browser development. Most of the time browser development improves user experience; making it faster, safer or more secure to surf the Web. However, sometimes those advancements cause users to change their workflow or expectations on how a browser should behave. In this post we are going to take a look at recent developments that affect users opening FileOpen-protected PDFs in a Web browser and how FileOpen is adapting to this change.
Say goodbye to NPAPI and ActiveX plug-ins
The presentation of PDF files in Adobe Reader within browsers has always been a somewhat odd and complex system. It works by Adobe installing a plug-in to the browser, generically the “Acrobat Helper”, which registers for the MIME type PDF and when the user clicks a link to a file of that type the helper launches or invokes the installed Adobe Acrobat/Reader program giving it the coordinates of the browser window. Acrobat/Reader then opens the PDF in an external window overlaying the window of the browser, such that the PDF appears to be displayed by the browser. When the file is encrypted using FileOpen the same thing happens with an added step of the FileOpen plug-in performing authentication and key retrieval prior to Acrobat/Reader displaying the file.
The above architecture was introduced somewhere around 1999 and has remained relatively unchanged except for some minor developments over the years. Recently, Chrome and Firefox have both deprecated NPAPI plug-ins, i.e. the mechanism by which the Adobe Helper operates, and both have integrated a native PDF viewer into the browser. It is still possible to configure Chrome to use the Adobe Acrobat/Reader as a PDF handler outside of the browser, but this advanced configuration will also be deprecated before the end of the year. Further, the new Microsoft Edge browser does not support any plug-ins, so Adobe cannot inject a mechanism to invoke Acrobat/Reader for PDFs opened in that environment (though Windows 10 also ships with IE 11, which does support Adobe integration). The bottom line is that Adobe or any other PDF Viewer that operates as a Plug-in is being excluded from the latest browser releases, and therefore FileOpen is being excluded as well.
We would like to show you a description here but the site won’t allow us. First things first, search for occurrences of the below files/strings on your server and examine their contents. Run a diff check of the file contents with corresponding files in the WordPress core GitHub repository or theme/plugin directory. You can use either of the approaches (or both) using SSH or using your IDE.
No, the Web isn’t going in reverse and losing features. Instead, browsers are now supporting PDF files natively in the browser; they are just not quite there yet. In nearly all cases this support does not include handling of complex PDF structures like forms, multimedia, or Security Handlers. So the user experience with PDF has become unpredictable, and demands system configuration, in ways that affect not only our solution, but every solution including Adobe’s own DRM. While FileOpen offers support for a number of other viewers (Foxit, Nuance, Nitro, Bluebeam, Tracker, etc.), neither we nor any other vendor can open encrypted files in the native Google Chrome, Apple Preview, Microsoft Edge or Mozilla PDF.js viewers. We expect that this situation will only get worse over time, so alternative approaches should be considered.
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Anticipating this, some years ago, we developed a set of technologies to convert PDF in real-time to renditions in Flash (.opn) or HTML5 (designed for clientless mobile delivery). FileOpen customers are provided with a set of tools to do browser fingerprinting and detection which in combination with their defined policies, determines which format is most appropriate to the requesting user and device. Alternatively, we have added support for “encapsulation”, in which the encrypted PDF is placed into an unencrypted cover page that will display in any viewer and can be used to give the user some explanation of what needs to be configured and/or a link to the same content in one of the Web-friendly formats.
Contact us if you are interested in learning more about this functionality, or request a free trial.
Did your computer fail to open a DDS file? We explain what DDS files are and recommend software that we know can open or convert your DDS files.What is a DDS file?
DDS stands for DirectDraw Surface. Files that contain the .dds file extension are used to store a variety of raster images.
The DDS file format is most commonly used by the Microsoft DirectX multimedia applications. This file format allows a user to store uncompressed and compressed pixel formats. It is the preferred file format for storing DXTn compressed data files.
The DDS file format is frequently used to store textures and environment maps that are used in gaming applications. This files are used to enhance a user's gameplay experience.
The DDS file format can also be used to store desktop backgrounds for the Windows operating system.
Software that will open, convert or fix DDS files
Try a universal file viewer
Try a universal file viewer like Free File Viewer. It can open over 200 different types of files - and most likely yours too. Download Free File Viewer here.
About File Extension DDS
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File.org aims to be the go-to resource for file type- and related software information. We spend countless hours researching various file formats and software that can open, convert, create or otherwise work with those files.
If you have additional information about the DDS file format or software that uses files with the DDS suffix, please do get in touch - we would love hearing from you.