
Seems to work pretty good despite the dodgy 32-bit libraries. Takes a while to run for the first time because it loads a license / TOS it wants you to agree to. don't type sudo), invoke the following at prompt to load the program: $ acroread Then install the package itself: # apt install adobereader-enu

I chose English, so I'll use that in my example.īut first, you have to install a couple required libraries: # apt install libatk-adaptor:i386 libgail-common:i386

There are a few different language versions, such as -enu (English), -deu (German), -fra (French) and -jp (Japanese). Search for the acroreader package using apt after adding the archive repository (where it is located): # apt search adobereader sudo, su root, etc.): # add-apt-repository "deb precise partner" I got it to install in Ubuntu 16.04 LTS / Mint 18 by doing the following with elevated permissions (e.g.

I'm not sure about Debian, but I'm guessing this would work.
