Adobe is pushing its Acrobat AI chatbot to the center of everyday work, adding new tools that make PDFs more interactive, editable, and even listenable.
Users can now edit PDFs using plain-language prompts—removing pages, adjusting text or images, adding e-signatures, or setting passwords without digging through menus. It’s a shift from manual clicking to conversational control.
Another major addition is the ability to turn PDFs into presentations. Acrobat can analyze one or multiple documents, extract key insights, and generate a first draft of a slide deck. With Adobe Express integration, users can refine tone, visuals, and layout—transforming dense reports into clearer, more engaging stories.
There’s also Generate Podcast, which converts long documents, meeting notes, or research into audio summaries. Instead of reading through pages of text, users can listen to focused briefings while commuting or multitasking—making information more accessible and easier to absorb.
Collaboration is evolving too. In shared PDF workspaces, teams can organize files, links, and notes while the AI assistant helps surface insights across documents.
The bigger picture: Adobe isn’t just adding AI features—it’s redefining what a document is. PDFs are moving from static pages to dynamic, multi-format knowledge assets.
If this trend continues, the future of office productivity may involve less scrolling—and more interacting with content in whatever format fits your workflow.