Reader For Chrome On Mac
Google Chrome is a browser that is growing in popularity. I’ve recently switched to Chrome, myself.
Intro to Chrome & Chrome OS Accessibility Video Series by Google. Navigating Chrome on Mac by Keyboard: Searching and the Address Bar. Introducing the ChromeVox Next Screen Reader on. The IOGEAR GSR202 is a TAA compliant USB Common Access Card Reader for military, government and even private sector workers who need everyday access to secure systems. Common Access Card (CAC) or Smart Card readers are used as a communications medium between the Smart Card and a host (e.g. This is not the case for Chrome, maybe because dark reader is better optimized for it or because safari loads pages faster on Mac than Chrome. I tried switching dark reader to ‘fast mode’, but in this case many pages may remain white or make images inverted.
There’s a lot to like about the Chrome browser:
- Fast
- Excellent bookmark handling
- Protected Mode (sandboxed) for more secure browsing and prevention of phishing attacks
- Built-in Google Sync to keep all your bookmarks synchronized across your computers
Chrome offers built-in basic PDF viewing and PDF conversion of web pages.
Nice as this sounds, Chrome can’t display every kind of PDF. When that happens, you’ll see this message
Chrome also lacks some of Reader (and Acrobat’s) navigational features such as Previous View and Next View.

Since Chrome is growing in popularity, of late I’ve received quite a few questions about PDF in Chrome:
- How do I get Adobe Reader (or Acrobat) to work in Google Chrome?
- How do I turn off the Chrome PDF viewer?
- Why does Chrome make huge PDFs?
- How do I get Chrome to print PDFs as text?
In this blog article, I’ll show you how to:
- Use Adobe Reader (or Acrobat) as the default PDF Viewer in Chrome
- How to create smaller, better quality PDFs from Chrome
Turning off Chrome’s Built-in PDF Viewer and using Adobe Reader or Acrobat instead
To turn off the Chrome PDF viewer, follow these steps:
- Install Adobe Reader or Adobe Acrobat if it is not already installed
- Open Google Chrome
- In the address bar, type . . .
about:plugins
(that’s the word about a colon (:), then plugins - The Plug-ins Tab will open
- Scroll down until you see either Adobe Acrobat or Reader.
Click the Enable link - Close the Plug-ins tab and restart Chrome.
Better PDF Printing from Chrome
Chrome has some nice printing features such as a built-in page preview and an ink-saving black and white option.
Unfortunately, Chrome creates huge PDFs. In my testing on this page of my blog, the file size difference was astounding:
- Chrome-generated PDF: 11.8 MB
- Acrobat-generated PDF: 953K
On some web pages, Chrome also rasterizes the text creating image-only PDFs. This was always the case in previous versions of Chrome, but it appears to be fixed in the Chrome version I tested (15.0.874.121 m).
If you have Acrobat installed, you can instead print a compact 'electronic' PDF with searchable text.
Here’s how:
- In Chrome, go to the web page you want to print
- Type CTRL-P to open the Chrome print preview window
- I the lower left corner of the window, click 'Print using system dialog'
- In the Print window, choose the AdobePDF print driver, then click the Print button.
What’s the difference?
I’ve highlighted the differences below, but in a nutshell:
Chrome Reader View
- The Chrome PDF is more than ten times bigger
- The Chrome PDF isn’t searchable
- You can’t select text in the Chome-generated PDF
- View quality is impacted
Ad Blocker For Chrome On Mac
Chrome Page printed with Acrobat |
953K |
File Preview at 400% |