This
page is provided as a service to assist visitors to eTXHealthinsurance
who are not familiar with how to download and read Adobe Acrobat Documents ( i.e.,
Portable Document Format (pdf) files). If
you already know how to use PDF files, proceed to the Adobe
Acrobat Reader site and
Accessibility
Issues | Installing Adobe Acrobat
| Printing Acrobat Files
Files ending in .PDF are Adobe Acrobat Portable Document Format files. Acrobat
files can be read on your computer screen or printed using an Adobe Acrobat "Reader"
available free from Adobe. If you wish to create your own Acrobat files,
you will need to purchase the commercial Adobe Acrobat package.
ACCESSIBILITY ISSUES
Beginning with version 5.0, Acrobat supports the Microsoft® Active Accessibility
(MSAA) Application Programming Interface (API) for the Windows® platform for
integration with assistive technology products including screen readers.
INSTALLING ADOBE ACROBAT
The Adobe
Acrobat Home Page contains detailed information on this product, and allows
you to download free copies of Acrobat for Windows, Macintosh, or UNIX systems.
We
suggest that you configure your Adobe Acrobat Reader as a plug-in application
for your World Wide Web browser. This can be accomplished with Adobe Acrobat
Reader version 3.0 or higher, and Netscape (2.0 or higher), Internet Explorer
(3.0 or higher), or compatible browsers. This allows the reader software
to integrate closely with the browser and allows you to begin to read the PDF
file while it is downloading. Version 3.0 or higher of the Adobe Acrobat
reader also permits reading of PDF pages side-by-side. If
you have an Internet browser installed on your system at the time that you install
Adobe Acrobat, it should automatically install itself as a helper application
in the browser. You will know that it is properly installed as a helper
application if you can view the PDF file in the browser window, with a
single row of special Acrobat buttons along the top of the viewing screen. Note
that with versions of the Reader prior to 3.0, you cannot save a PDF file to your
local disk after you have read it. You had to have the commercial Adobe
Acrobat software in order to save the file. This limitation was removed
with version 3.0 of the Reader software. 
PRINTING
ADOBE ACROBAT FILES
When printing Adobe Acrobat PDF files from within your web browser, do NOT use
the web browser print facility. Instead, use the Print button on the special
Adobe Acrobat tool bar, which appears immediately above the viewing window.
See illustration below for location of this print button. You may also use
the Save a Copy button to save a copy to your computer for future use or printing. 
If you have any questions, don't hesitate to contact
us.
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