
If you installed the software Acrobat Pro on your Mac, you may save your file directly as a PDF/A file: download instructions. Click on the "Windows / MS Word" tab for instructions. You can save your file as a regular PDF, then convert your PDF into PDF/A with Adobe Acrobat Pro DC on any HSG workstation. Unfortunately, Word for Mac (2011/2016) does no longer include a feature to save as a PDF/A. Benefactors of the University of St.Gallen. Terminology of the University of St.Gallen. Special topic: 50 years of women's suffrage.
Special Topic HSG Learning Center - SQUARE. Special topic: 51st St.Gallen Symposium. Consultancy for Empirical Economic- and Social Research. International Affairs and Political Economy (DIA). Organization Studies and Cultural Theory (DOK).
Graduate Programme in Economics and Finance (GPEF). Faculty Affairs Professorships and Senior Lecturers. Leadership Programm for Presidents, Vice-Presidents and Deans. Management, Organization Studies and Cultural Theory. Admission to Additional Qualification Programmes. Works better than the version available in the Arch Linux AUR (which takes a fair bit of hacking) which I used for work for nearly a year without problem. Seems to work pretty good despite the dodgy 32-bit libraries. Takes a while to run for the first time because it loads a license / TOS it wants you to agree to. don't type sudo), invoke the following at prompt to load the program: $ acroread Then install the package itself: # apt install adobereader-enu I chose English, so I'll use that in my example.īut first, you have to install a couple required libraries: # apt install libatk-adaptor:i386 libgail-common:i386 There are a few different language versions, such as -enu (English), -deu (German), -fra (French) and -jp (Japanese). Search for the acroreader package using apt after adding the archive repository (where it is located): # apt search adobereader
sudo, su root, etc.): # add-apt-repository "deb precise partner" I got it to install in Ubuntu 16.04 LTS / Mint 18 by doing the following with elevated permissions (e.g. I'm not sure about Debian, but I'm guessing this would work.