Oh yeah, almost forgot, you can disable Adobe Reader starting with windows by using msconfig (at least in XP).
I did that, after the computer rebooted Adobe took over again. I have windows XP. I never had an option to turn off updates from any menu using the free reader.
Adobe Updater could be disabled or configurated accordingly.
Sorry, it’s on Portuguese…
Well, on my system stopping Adobe’s startup in msconfig stopped it for good, so you may have something else affecting it. You could always get Autoruns from SysInternals which gives you a lot more control over startups. As far as the option to turn off updates in Adobe Reader 8 (free) it is there. As I said in my other post you must go through these steps to get to it:
click - help>check for updates>preferences>then uncheck “Automatically check for Adobe updates”
One thing I did forget to mention last time though is that after clicking “check for updates” you must allow it to finish checking for new updates before it will give you the “preferences” option which is where you must go to turn off auto updates.
If you have swithced to either Foxit or PDF-Xchange viewer though you are better off anyway. I only use Adobe Reader on one system due to some files my daughter requires for school which will not work in Foxit or PDF-Xchange for some reason.
Thanks Firebytes for writing what I was not able to explain.
Marc57
Thanks for the info on Foxit reader. I tried it on a virtual machine and liked it. I uninstalled acrobat reader and installed free Foxit reader on my actual pc and it works fine for my needs. Acrobat reader reminds me of the Real Player, both seem to alter your settings to theirs when you update!
Joe