![]() I haven’t been able to get access to a faster machine to test it myself, but if necessary I can just buy the new one, test it, and return it if the gain isn’t worth the cost. What leads me to suspect it’s not running multiple cores is that while doing OCR it doesn’t appreciably slow down the rest of the computer, and Activity Monitor shows it using less than 100% of CPU while it often shows more than 100% for other CPU intensive apps like video rendering. The new machine should be a lot faster in general between essentially triple the processor cores and a much better GPU (plus I’m doubling the RAM to 16 gigs) but the question is, will Acrobat actually use all that power, or will I find it still hobbling around on just one core? I’m considering upgrading from my dual-core i5 13” MacBook Pro to one of the new 6-core i7 15” MacBook Pro. Running OCR on very large (500+ page) PDF files is a daily task for me so speeding the task up would save me a lot of time. It installs automatically when you install your first Creative Cloud app. Download and install apps, share files, find fonts and Adobe Stock assets, set preferences, and more all from the Creative Cloud desktop app. It’s not particularly atrocious, it’s just always been a little slower than I’d like. Easily manage your Creative Cloud apps and services. I’ve been having some performance frustration with OCR in Acrobat Pro.
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