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BreezePDF launches a fully client-side, in-browser PDF editor that processes files locally with no uploads or document tracking. The web app offers a full PDF toolkit—text/image editing, signatures, form fields, merge/split, redact, OCR (desktop), export to DOCX/CSV, password protection, and 30+ tools—usable offline after the initial load and free to use with a three-download monthly limit. A paid BreezePDF Pro subscription ($12/mo) adds unlimited downloads, native desktop apps for macOS/Windows
BreezePDF is a browser-based, client-side PDF editor that runs entirely in the user’s browser with no uploads or signup required. It bundles a full toolkit—text and image editing, digital signatures, form fields, merge/split, page reordering, password encryption, DOCX/CSV export, OCR in the desktop app, and 30+ other tools—plus offline support and dark mode. A Pro tier offers unlimited downloads, a desktop app, and additional features like desktop OCR and batch automation. The app emphasizes privacy and convenience by processing files locally, which matters for users and organizations handling sensitive documents and seeking lightweight, web-native alternatives to installed PDF suites. BreezePDF targets productivity workflows where security and ease of use are priorities.
BreezePDF, an in-browser PDF editor that keeps files local, launched an expanded release with nearly 40 tools including edit, sign, merge, compress, redact, OCR, form filling, table extraction, and more — all without sign-up and with files never leaving the user’s computer. Creator philjohnson rebuilt the app over 10 months after an earlier HN post, and added a desktop app (macOS, Windows, Linux) plus a CLI/SDK for developers. Hacker News commenters suggested features like adaptive readability enhancement and PII redaction for LLM uploads; the developer has already prototyped markup-based PII redaction and is exploring readability improvements. The offering matters for privacy-conscious users and developers needing local, scriptable PDF tooling.
Developer releases BreezePDF, a free in-browser PDF editor that performs ~40 tools — edit, sign, merge, compress, redact, OCR, fill forms, extract tables — without uploading files off the user’s machine. The creator rebuilt and expanded the project over 10 months after an earlier Hacker News post, adding a desktop app for macOS, Windows and Linux plus a CLI/SDK for developers. It emphasizes local processing and privacy as the main differentiator from many online PDF services that send documents to servers. BreezePDF matters for users and organizations seeking client-side PDF tooling and for developers wanting an embeddable, privacy-preserving PDF workflow.
BreezePDF launches a fully client-side, in-browser PDF editor that processes files locally with no uploads or document tracking. The web app offers a full PDF toolkit—text/image editing, signatures, form fields, merge/split, redact, OCR (desktop), export to DOCX/CSV, password protection, and 30+ tools—usable offline after the initial load and free to use with a three-download monthly limit. A paid BreezePDF Pro subscription ($12/mo) adds unlimited downloads, native desktop apps for macOS/Windows/Linux, CLI batch tools, OCR and signing features. The privacy-first approach and offline-first functionality target professionals and teams needing secure, browser-native document editing without cloud processing.