

(Enter your license code or press Demo when prompted, and login to Google Docs when prompted.) When the linked document is edited, double-click the link-changed icon in the Links panel to update.

I am working on a brochure (40 pages, about 180 images). In InDesign, use File > DocsFlow > Place from Google Docs to select a Google Docs document to place and link. Then click to place the file normally, in one text frame, or threaded across multiple frames and pages, just like you would normally do in InDesign. Solved: When I import, InDesign shows the first line only. New WordsFlow menu added to the File menu in InDesign.

Look here to find the latest and greatest plug-ins from third-party developers. Every little action has about a 5 second delay! It is not my computer, it is specifically inDesign. To place a story and begin to use WordsFlow right away, choose File> WordsFlow > Place with WordsFlow (a new menu command added by the plugin). Add even more capability to your Adobe® InDesign® software. There are many reasons why InDesign might be running slowly, but here’s a quick rundown of things I would try in this situation, more or less in the order I would likely try them. If you don’t have enough, it will be sluggish or even die. I would never try to run InDesign on a machine with less than 2 GB of RAM, and I’m forever cursing that my laptop with 8 GB is not enough (but I’m also constantly running 5 to 10 programs, often including Photoshop, Illustrator, and Word). Common wisdom says keep 10 of your drive free. (That’s 50 GB for a 500 GB drive) InDesign relies on your drive because it writes to the scratch disk when it runs out of RAM (this happens far more than you’d expect). Hard drive space can also be a cause of problems, especially if you’re working on a nearly-full drive. There are three main display modes in InDesign: Fast, Typical, and High Quality (under View > Display Performance). Common wisdom says keep 10% of your drive free. (That’s 50 GB for a 500 GB drive!) InDesign relies on your drive because it writes to the “scratch disk” when it runs out of RAM (this happens far more than you’d expect). There are three main display modes in InDesign: Fast, Typical, and High Quality (under View > Display Performance). Obviously, the higher the quality, the more InDesign has to think and the slower it’ll become. If you’re working in Typical and it still seems like one or more images are in high-quality mode, then those images may have display quality overrides applied to them. You can disable those from the Display Performance submenu. InDesign also has other display modes that could potentially slow it down: View > Proof Colors, and View > Overprint Preview.
