Adobe's Acrobat AI Assistant will help users summarize digital documents

Before the release of the Acrobat AI assistant to all users, Adobe launched a beta version in February, which allowed its beta users to locate specific information, generate summaries, and provide citations drawn from the text using a chatbox interface provided by the tool.

Now, it has made the Acrobat AI assistant available to help users understand and summarize the content of digital documents – adding a subscription price of $4.99 a month for those who want to have early access to the feature – with plans to make the feature available for free in the future.

The company also released a free mobile version of the tool in beta that can respond to voice commands, with plans to make it available to extensions on Microsoft Edge and Google Chrome.

Currently, Adobe has over 33 million paid subscribers on its creative cloud solution, according to data from ProDesignTools, with 400 billion PDFs opened and 16 billion documents edited in Adobe Acrobat in the last year, according to company data.

Given that the company has released several tools in the past that have been used umpteen times by its users, it is very likely that its new Acrobat AI assistant will meet expectations.

Adobe plans to integrate Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning into all its products
Global content and cloud software conglomerate Adobe will look to integrate artificial intelligence and machine learning into all its product offers rather than using these technologies to make separate tools, as it seeks to increase revenue. Mohapatra expects an infusion of these technologies to make them more appealing to customers