A failed download can manifest itself in several ways. When you initiate the download, the process may fail to start or the download may stop prematurely.
The download may also stop with an error message before the installation file has been completely downloaded. When trying to open Adobe Acrobat, users may sometimes experience an error message that usually starts with something like "Adobe Acrobat Reader DC has stopped working. This happens even when you try restarting the computer and even reinstalling the application. In a number of cases, making updates to installed versions of Adobe Acrobat causes more problems than solutions.
Acrobat may sometimes freeze or crash when an update is being installed or stop functioning all together after the update. You may also experience a number of "Update failed" errors, including unexpected termination during update, error writing to file, insufficient privileges to modify specific files, error removing an older version of the application, and tons of other errors that come up during or after the update.
Sometimes, PDF files may completely refuse to open on Adobe Acrobat, even after performing a fresh installation and using different methods to upload files drag-and-drop, file import, or via the right-clicking option on the PDF file icon.
Windows users. Windows 8 Select Use this app for all. Windows 10 Select Always use this app to open. Windows Click OK. Mac OS users. Click the PDF file's icon in the Finder to select it. Click Change All. Restart your computer. Be cautious. There was an add-on in the Chrome Web Store that supposedly stopped these PDFs from downloading forcibly, but it no longer works. Barring a poor internet connection , this usually occurs due to conflicting third-party extensions or malicious browser-targeted code on your PC.
So, let's see how you can get Chrome back to normal. To determine if this the cause of the issue, try working in Incognito mode. Doing this launches Chrome with all extensions disabled. To do that, point to More Tools on the Chrome menu, and then click Extensions. Once you comes across the problematic plugin, consider removing it or keeping it disabled when using Chrome in normal mode.
If the problem occurs even in Incognito mode, then there might be malware hidden away on your PC that interferes with the browser's basic functions. It should take a while for Chrome to detect and clean up your PC. You may find various instances of missing images, weird-looking text, or laggy scrolling on certain PDFs — and rarely, on all documents that you open.
However, running through the following fixes should make Chrome display PDFs properly. Afterward, check if you still encounter issues when viewing PDFs. An outdated web cache is another common reason for incorrectly rendering or malfunctioning PDFs, especially if the cache gets corrupted or certain web elements change subsequently later on.
Hence, clearing all locally cached data should prompt the browser to download fresh content and hopefully render your PDFs properly. If there are incompatibilities between your video drivers and the Chrome PDF viewer, you are bound to run into all sorts of weird graphical anomalies. Chrome uses hardware acceleration by default, but stopping it from doing so should fix severe lagging or flickering issues.
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