Skip to main content
Participant
January 11, 2024
Question

Does the Adobe PDF printer run on a Windows 11 virtual machine running on an M3 Mac on Parallels 19?

  • January 11, 2024
  • 1 reply
  • 4198 views

I installed Acrobat DC Pro on a Windows 11 virtual machine, running on Parallels 19 on an M3 Macbook Pro. Acrobat Pro did install and runs; however, the Adobe PDF printer did not install. I subsequently tried to install the Adobe PDF printer manually using methods outlined in articles posted here, but this was not successful.  Does anyone know if the Adobe PDF printer is compatible with Windows 11 running as a virtual machine on Parallels 19 on an ARM (M3) Mac? I need the Adobe PDF printer to create pdf bookmarks when creating a pdf version of a Framemaker book (I'm using Framemaker 9, which runs fine in this environment).

This topic has been closed for replies.

1 reply

ls_rbls
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 11, 2024

I am not a macOS user , but did you tried installing it through the Apple's Bonjour Printer wizard?

 

Also, when you try Save As PDF in the absence of the Adobe PDF Converter, do you get any errors?

 

See if any of the Knowledge Base topics below are helpful:

 

Participant
January 11, 2024

I did not install the adobe PDF printer using the Bonjour wizard, as that wizard is part of Mac OS-X, while the Adobe PDF printer driver is under Windows. I did try installing the Acrobat 64-bit patch in the first link, but it did not work; after installing the patch and rebooting, the Adobe PDF printer was still not present. I'll note that when I ran the patch, a window opened saying th at the file AdobePDF.dll is needed, and asking that the path where the file is located be typed.

However, the field was pre-populated with 

 

C:\Program Files\Adobe\Acrobat DC\Acrobat\Xtras\AdobePDF\Arm64Vista

 

But, in the AdobePDF folder there is no Arm64Vista folder. Is it possible that this is the problem, i.e., that this dll file is needed?  If so, do you know where I could get it?

 

Thanks.

 

ls_rbls
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 14, 2024

Unless you've only have Adobe Acrobat Pro DC for windows, If you are able to install Acrobat for macOS, I think it may provide the necessary virtual device driver modules to Parallels (which if I am not wrong, Parallels will be the emulating layer).

 

Like I said, I am not a macOS use but I've tried many things on different Linux distros that are possible.

 

MacOS being so restricted, it might make my suggestions sound shallow, nevertheless, if it was up to me, that is something I would be looking into and worth giving a shot.