Contexthub to Adobe target - testing

May I know if its already default that the data in contexthub is already saved in adobe target as profile visitor if not do anyone know how can i export the data from aem contexthub to adobe target.
I tried to create audience in adobe target and choose the visitor profile and get the customized data from content hub but it shows to the report that my audience wasn't read

Related

Streaming large PDFs from SharePoint

I have a client that wants to store large PDFs (>700MB) on SharePoint 2013. The problem is that viewing the PDF is currently requiring the entire PDF to be download before displaying the first page. I need the browser to display each page of the PDF as it downloads, a feature I believe Adobe calls "Fast Web View" or "Byte Streaming". Here is what I know:
"Fast Web View" is enabled on the PDF document in the Document Properties window.
I can verify that the PDF is "Linearized" by reading the ASCII content.
I have checked the PDF reading options from the PDF Accessibility.
The client has SharePoint 2013 on premise installed.
SharePoint's File Handling is set to permissive.
I have verified PDF is an AllowedInlinedownedMinme type of the Web Application.
Anything else I should check or configure?
It is not enough if the PDF files are linearized (technical term in PDF parlance) or optimized for fast web view (marketing term for that feature).
There need to be two conditions met before taking advantage of fast web view working for the end user:
The PDF viewer needs to be able to make use of the linearized/optimized PDF file features.
The PDF serving remote host (in this case SharePoint) needs to be properly configured to honor 'byte range requests' by the viewer, so downloading chunks of the PDF file may be delivered "out of order".
However,...
...I do not know if SharePoint servers in general do support the second requirement;
...if SharePoint is not the problem, you may want to check which PDF viewer is actually in use in that environment (test it with Adobe Reader -- that one takes advantage of linearized PDF features for sure).
See also this answer to a question from today, which gives a few more technical details:
How are PDF files able to be partially displayed while downloading?
A co-worker identified the problem after comparing the download from SharePoint to that of a working site using WireShark. The SharePoint site didn't include "Byte ranging" in the response headers. In order to enable that feature in SharePoint, you have to enable BlobCache. Beware, BlobCache is not supported in SharePoint foundations.

How to View a Google Spreadsheet Doc as a PDF

I would like to know if it's possible to view a Google Spreadsheet Doc as a PDF without first manually converting it as a PDF? I don't want to share a link directly to the spreadsheet, I want to share a link to a PDF version of it which ends up looking better (in Print View rather than Spreadsheet Document View)
I know I can Print > Save as PDF, then download to local machine, then upload and save somewhere on my server. But is there is a way to be able to view the spreadsheet as a PDF.
I have Google'd this and found nothing. The best I could come up with is the Google Document Viewer (https://docs.google.com/viewer) but that does not seem to give mt the option I am looking for. Further, I do not want to install any Chrome plugins, etc. because I want to be able to share a link to the PDF with people but not have to have them install a plugin to see the doc.
Unfortunately, what you are trying to do and the way you are trying to do it is not a capability within Google Docs. Sorry.
I think the best way is to use Google Drive API to write own script that will do this job. I mean:
You have a web server
Write a simple method in any web technology, such as PHP, Python, Java, C#, whatever you like and your server is able to serve. This method is connected to the google drive through it's API to your account, knows which spreadsheet to take care of and how to understand the columns. This spread should be parsed to HTML and with some popular tool (proper for your programming language or server's operating system) you create the PDF. The method should create HTTP response with header type: application/pdf.
You provide interested people with the link under which your method is available.
I guess this reference should help you to use Google API:
How to download the resources:
https://developers.google.com/drive/web/manage-downloads
How to convert (i.e. to PDF) and open the resources in your own application:
https://developers.google.com/drive/web/integrate-open#open_and_convert_google_docs_in_your_app
I hope this helps.

PDf viewer without download option

i have some pdf files which i'd like to upload on my association site thus i'd like them not to be able to download it as it may content some slightly sensitive information .
So ok they could ctrl+c but that would reduce the spreading of the information not to have them locally
php/js w/e
thanks
quoted answer from a similar question, if you' re using Adobe pdf viewer:
You can NOT prevent users from saving ANY TYPE of document from the web - PDF, HTML, JPEG, etc. It's a "feature" of the web.
What you CAN DO is prevent users from being able to use the PDF once it hits their own disk. To do this, you use powerful Digital Rights Management solutions...:
https://forums.adobe.com/message/5158866

How to add an e-signature to a PDF File from a Smart Card?

I have a Java EE app that needs to implement e-signing of PDF Files. The user needs to be able to click a link that will generate a PDF File based on data in the database and see the PDF in their browser. The use then needs to be able to "sign" the document using their private key stored on their smart card (which is plugged into a smart card reader on the PC that they're using). Users are using Windows 7 and JRE 1.6
I was hoping to use iText for the PDF generation, but it is unclear what solution I would use on the client-side for pulling information in from from the smart card and then for applying that information to sign the PDF and show the PDF as being signed (either showing the user's signature or updating the doc to say that it has been signed).
Has anyone done this before and has a solution?
It does not help reading a certificate from the smartcard, as you
need the private key.
You should not (and most often can not) read the private key from the smartcard
(that's the reason for using a smartcard)
To access the smartcard you need to interface one of the native
API's like plain PC/SC, PKCS#11 or CSP.
To do this from the browser you need either an ActiveX or an Applet.
Building this from scratch is very ambitious
Some critical information is:
- what reader
- what smartcard
- what browser
- what os
to select or develop a solution
We have a commercial product built using applet technology that does exactly what you requested (take a PDF, interface to the smartcard, sign the hash, insert the signature in any form supported by PDF, post the signed PDF). If you are interested, i will provide a contact.
Use PDF Studio. I had an issue with my CAC reader config.cfg file but after I deleted the "slot = 1" line it worked like a champ. My file now looks like this:
name = SunPKCS11
library = /usr/lib64/libcackey.so
For further info visit:
https://www.qoppa.com/pdfstudio/

Tracking through PDF

I am exporting a document as a PDF. It is kept on a publicly accessibly website so that any users can download and read it. Now I want to track this. e.g. "How many times the PDF got opened."
Note that my question is not to track while I download, we need to track when the PDF is opened. Is there any kind of script that is invoked when the PDF is opened so that Adobe Acrobat Reader sends the details to my server?
These are the details I would like:
IP
Date/Time
Possbilly GEO Location.
Yes, you can probably do this. PDF includes a Javascript API, which some (but not all) PDF readers implement. I'm only certain of Acrobat and Foxit Reader doing this, and it can be turned off in both, for security and privacy reasons. That said, it's probably your best shot.
I glanced through the Javascript for Acrobat API Reference, and it looks like you could register for the "Page/Open" event (page 368 in my copy), and on receiving the first one of those, make a Net.HTTP call (page 548) to a web server you're running. That will get you the date/time and the public IP of the client reading the document, from which you can get a geolocation using a service like GeoIP.
I'm not sure this is possible. Although PDF can execute Javascript, reader software is naturally paranoid about malware being embedded in "benign" documents, so the execution context is quite restricted, with warnings shown about possible dangerous activity.
See previous SO question Can my PDF ping my server when it is opened?