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Managing PDF Files Online: Splitting, Extracting, and Merging Made Simple

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Managing PDF Files Online: Splitting, Extracting, and Merging Made Simple

TL;DR: Need to split a large PDF, extract a few pages, or merge multiple files without installing software? This guide shows how to use free online PDF tools to split by page ranges, extract specific pages, and combine PDFs, fast, with clean output and temporary file handling. It also explains what’s happening under the hood and when it makes sense to use an SDK like Syncfusion’s PDF JavaScript Library inside your own app.

PDFs are the standard format for sharing reports, eBooks, invoices, contracts, and academic files. But working with PDFs isn’t always straightforward. You may need to extract specific pages, split a large document into smaller files, or merge multiple PDFs into one organized document, all without installing heavy software or paying for premium tools.

That’s where free, browser‑based Syncfusion® PDF tools come in. With just a few clicks, you can split, merge, extract, and reorganize PDF files directly online, no downloads, no sign‑ups, and no technical expertise required.

This guide explains how free online PDF tools help you manage documents efficiently and how to use split and merge features to simplify everyday workflows.

Experience a leap in PDF technology with Syncfusion's PDF Library, shaping the future of digital document processing.

Common PDF challenges in everyday digital workflows

PDFs are everywhere at work, in education, and in personal projects. Despite their popularity, they often introduce friction into routine tasks.

Here are the most common PDF challenges users face and how online tools help overcome them effortlessly:

1. Large or Multi-section PDFs

Long reports, multi-chapter eBooks, and scanned PDFs are cumbersome to share and navigate when you only need specific sections.

Solution: A free browser‑based PDF splitter allows you to break large PDFs into smaller, usable parts in seconds.

2. Extracting only selected pages

Whether it’s a signature page, receipt, or a single chapter, extracting specific pages using traditional software is often unnecessarily complex or locked behind paid features.

Solution: A free online PDF page extractor lets you quickly select and download just the pages you need, making document handling simple and fast.

3. Combining multiple PDFs

Merging documents is a common requirement, yet many tools restrict file counts, add watermarks, or require subscriptions.

Solution: A free online PDF merger lets you upload multiple files, reorder them easily, and generate a clean, unified PDF without limitations or signups.

4. Basic page management

Tasks like reordering pages, rotating sections, separating chapters, or removing unwanted content shouldn’t require premium desktop software.

Solution: Modern online PDF management tools give you instant access to essential features, making it easy to organize and restructure your PDFs for free, right in your browser.

Split PDF online: Extract and manage pages effortlessly

Splitting a PDF is one of the most useful document handling tasks. You might need to isolate chapters, remove unnecessary sections, or create smaller files for sharing.

With a free online PDF splitter, you can extract pages, define custom ranges, and generate organized output files quickly and easily.

Why split a PDF online?

Splitting helps you:

  • Extract only relevant sections
  • Create smaller files for email or uploads
  • Remove unwanted or confidential pages
  • Organize complex documents
  • Avoid paid or complicated desktop software

How the split PDF tool works

You can split a PDF using two flexible modes:

Mode 1: Split by page range

Perfect for breaking a document into organized sections.

  • Custom ranges: Define multiple page ranges (e.g., 1–3, 4–7, 10–15).
  • Fixed ranges: Automatically split a PDF into equal parts (e.g., every 5 pages).
  • Add multiple ranges: Ideal for extracting multiple sections at once.
  • Clear visual preview: Review each output range (Range 1, Range 2, etc.) labeled clearly before download.
PDF document split by Page Range
PDF document split by Page Range

Mode 2: Extract specific pages

Perfect when you only need a few pages from a large document.

  • Enter single pages or mixed ranges (e.g., 2, 5–7, 12).
  • Combine extracted pages into a single PDF if needed.
  • Preview selected pages before downloading.

Perfect for contracts, receipts, and selected slides or sections.

Extracting Specific PDF Ranges

Output and processing

After selecting your split mode:

  • Files are processed instantly.
  • Formatting and layout remain intact.
  • Output can be downloaded as individual PDFs or ZIP files.
  • Files are handled securely and temporarily in the browser.

Split your PDF for free in just a few seconds. Try it out now!

Merge PDF online: Combine files into one organized document

Merging PDFs helps streamline storage, sharing, and submission. Instead of dealing with multiple files, you can create a single, structured document that’s easier to manage.

A free online PDF merger makes merging files fast and frustration-free, with no software installations, no signups, and no hidden limitations.

Why merge PDF files online?

Merging PDFs allows you to:

  • Combine related files into one document
  • Reduce clutter and file management overhead
  • Maintain consistent formatting
  • Simplify downloading, printing, and sharing
  • Avoid watermarks or paid software

How the Merge PDF tool works

Syncfusion’s Merge free PDF tool is designed with clarity and simplicity in mind. You can combine any number of PDF files in just a few steps:

  • Upload files
    Drag and drop multiple PDFs or select them from your device. Each file appears with a visual preview.
  • Reorder pages or files
    Arrange PDFs in your preferred sequence to control the final document structure.
  • Merge and download
    The files are merged instantly into a clean, high-quality PDF that’s ready for download.

The tool supports mixed page sizes, orientations, scanned files, and even encrypted PDFs (with permission).

Merge PDF tool
Merge PDF tool

Merge your PDF files for free in just a few seconds. Try it out now!

Why Syncfusion’s free PDF tools stand out

Syncfusion’s online PDF tools are designed for speed, simplicity, and security. Key advantages include:

  • Powered by an Enterprise‑Grade PDF JavaScript engine trusted by global organizations.
  • Completely free with no limits or watermarks
  • No installation or sign‑up required
  • Fast processing for both small and large files
  • Clean, intuitive user interface
  • Secure, privacy‑focused file handling
  • Works seamlessly across desktop and mobile devices

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I extract non-consecutive pages?

Yes. You can select individual pages or mixed ranges and download them as a combined or separate PDF.

Will document quality change?

No. Fonts, images, and layout remain intact after splitting or merging.

Are files stored on the server?

No. Files are processed temporarily and then automatically deleted.

Does it work with scanned or mixed-size PDFs?

Yes. Both scanned and digital PDFs, including mixed-page-size files, are supported.

Is installation required?

No. All tools work directly in your browser on desktop and mobile devices.

Syncfusion’s high-performance PDF Library allows you to create PDF documents from scratch without Adobe dependencies.

Conclusion

Thank you for reading! Managing PDFs doesn’t have to be complicated. Whether you need to split pages, extract key sections, or merge multiple files into one document, free online PDF tools make the process quick, secure, and accessible.

With no installations, no watermarks, and no restrictions, you can handle everyday PDF tasks in seconds directly from your browser.

Explore the Syncfusion PDF JavaScript Library to enhance your applications with advanced PDF processing features.

Split and merge your PDFs online for free, easily, and securely. Try it now!

If you’re a Syncfusion user, you can download the setup from the license and downloads page. Otherwise, you can download a free 30-day trial.

You can also contact us through our support forumsupport portal, or feedback portal for queries. We are always happy to assist you!

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Performance Monitor 2.3 Release: ErikAI, More FinOps, and MCP Madness

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Performance Monitor 2.3 Release: ErikAI, More FinOps, and MCP Madness


Summary

In this video, I provide an update on the upcoming release 2.3.0 of the monitoring tool, highlighting several exciting features and improvements. One of the most anticipated additions is the introduction of EricAI, a smart analysis engine designed to offer advice and insights similar to those I would provide manually. This tool will analyze various metrics, such as lock weights and page IO latch weights, to suggest potential optimizations and improvements. Additionally, I discuss enhancements to the FinOps functionality, aiming to make the tool more user-friendly and cost-effective, with features like a new monthly cost column and a light data importer for seamless data migration. The release also includes bug fixes and improved testing processes to ensure a smoother user experience.

Chapters

Full Transcript

Erik monitoring tool mogul, reasonable rates darling here. In this video I want to talk a little bit about the upcoming release 2.3.0 of the monitoring tools. These features will impact largely both of them, though some of them to different degrees. So just to talk about a few of the things that are going to be in there. Zoom. So one of the features that I’ve always wanted to put into a monitoring tool was like a smart analysis engine. I’m terrible at naming things, and so I didn’t name this thing. Claude just started calling it EricAI. I think it was trying to be nice to me after messing a bunch of stuff up. But what this is going to be is sort of like trying to give you the advice that I would give you. Look at the things that I would look at. It’s maybe not, you know, it’s not going to be a hundred percent there for a little bit, but I am starting to, you know, break ground and get some of the scenarios out there. What’s been fun about this is like, you know, like not having every scenario, like readily available to me while I’m building this has been building sort of like a test data mockup thing where, you know, we can play with different numbers and see how the thing, different inferences sort of follow the path. So like, you know, some like basic ones, right? Like you look at weight stats and you’re like, or like, you know, you sometimes you start with weight stats. Sometimes you look at weight stats and you’re like, that’s boring. But let’s just say you always start looking at weight stats and you see a bunch of lock weights. Then EricAI will go look at the block process and deadlock reports and we’ll figure out like what kind of queries are blocking, right? And it will go like look at different like query collectors to see if there are like performance issues with those queries. It might even look and tell you if, you know, if there’s a lot of reader on writer blocking and deadlocking, if an optimistic or row versioning isolation level would make sense. It’ll also do stuff like if you have like really high page IO latch weights and you have like 24 gigs of memory and four terabytes of data. EricAI will tell you some bold and reasonable things about your situation. So there’s a whole bunch of stuff like that in there. And, you know, like working through that and trying to get all the different scenarios covered. So that’s going to be a fun little project. The other thing that I have going on in this release is a bunch of updates to the FinOps stuff. Apparently FinOps is a thing that bosses love.

And my goal is to try to make this is helpful or rather I want this tool to be as easy for you to get and use in your environment as possible. And part of that is appealing to bosses. Bosses love FinOps because FinOps means saving money. So not only is this tool free, but this tool might also save you money too. So like, you know, not only is it trying to infer like, you know, like interest server optimizations and stuff for like, you know, things you can do things you can do in place that could maybe lead to like hardware downsizing, or it could lead to like maybe even like moving from like enterprise to standard edition. Long term also want to look at like server consolidation things. I also want to look at I mean, I have a very, very, very long stretch goal, incredibly long stretch goal, where I want to figure out I want to sort of like do like a like, like how compatible your SQL Server stuff code and everything else is with migrating to Postgres. It’s just going to be like a scorecard. I think I don’t I don’t know if I could actually go beyond that. But it’s going to be fun to work on.

Some other stuff that have gone in there. Oh, before before I move on, a couple things with the FinOps. So like, I tried to think of a bunch of reasonable ways for people to rather for me to infer how much your SQL Server costs you. Turns out, that’s like impossible to do, right? Like, I mean, like a standard enterprise have list prices, everything in the cloud has list prices. And then like, you know, is it reserved? Is it spot? Is it three years? Is there one year? I don’t know. And I don’t want to figure all that out. So I let you tell me how much your server costs you a month, because I don’t know, right? I’m not going to be able to look at everything and figure that out. So if you go into manage servers, now, you’re going to have this new column called monthly costs. And I just threw a number in there to get some other stuff showing. But if you don’t have numbers in there, after you upgrade, if you highlight a server, and you go to edit, you can put the monthly cost in there. And you can tell me how much this server costs you a month. And then we can start figuring out how much we can save you based on that. Right? So that’s pretty fun stuff. There’s been some other things added to this. This is not a very great example, because this is just looking at SQL Server 2022. And I haven’t been doing a lot of query work on it. But, you know, just sort of some cost savings recommendations. So some stuff in there, of course, you know, the utilization tab, I talked about this in another video.

But I did add a new tab to this. And the new tab is fun. Because if you if you watched another video of mine about SP Quickie Store, where I talked about sort of like looking at queries, but like using like the sort of 8020 rule, and figuring out like, you know, like, you know, like 20% of your queries are responsible for 80% of your misery or something. I started I put that in here too. It’s not exactly the same as the one in Quickie Store. But it does do, you know, pretty much identically the same thing. But this will start looking through your query stats data and trying to figure out which queries across like a variety of metrics are responsible for like, just you know, a lot of your misery. Like for this example, you know, we have this tp, tp, hammerdb tpcc query, that has had 376 million executions use 3 million milliseconds of CPU time, right, just like 35.9% almost 36% of the servers entire CPU time. So this is clearly something that we’d want to be like, hey, like, what are you doing? Like, maybe can we do anything about you, right? This is something that you’d want to address. So we have that stuff going on in there. So a couple neat things that that I’m working on in there.

Another thing, this is actually some user submitted issues that I thought were good. A light data import. So you know, I always sort of pictured the light thing is something that someone would just spin up and start, you know, plowing away the server with. I didn’t, I didn’t think people would use this as like a long term monitoring tool. Turns out, they love this thing. Turns out, it’s a great long term monitoring tool. I didn’t know that. It’s not at all how I pictured it. But you know what, I’m not complaining, use it however you want. But but there was no way to bring easily bring data from like a past version to a new version. So now I’ve got a light data importer in there. Basically, the way that works is, you open up the new version, you open up the new version and you hit an import button. And the import button will like you point it to the directory where your old thing is in, it’ll flush all the data out of your current DuckDB database to a parquet file. And then it’ll copy all the parquet files over to your new, your new directory. So you’ll have all your past data in there.

I’ve got an alert now for when servers go online and offline. In the light database, there is a per server utility database setting, because one of the FinOps tabs up there runs SP index cleanup to get you a list of indexes you can consolidate. And turns out not everyone uses like master or performance monitor or whatever. And also, if you’re using light, you probably don’t have a performance monitor database. So you can pick which database you want to use in there. All of the execution plan analysis stuff that I’ve been working on in Performance Studio has been getting ported over to the two dashboards. And so now I have MCP tools that can run those rules and do that stuff. Let’s see. Here, I don’t know, there was some MCP stuff that I worked on, blah, blah, blah. And let’s see. Well, I don’t know, there’s been a bunch of bug fixes since bug fixes since the last one. These are less, these are less fun to talk about, because you know, I hate bugs. And I hate knowing that I produce something that had a problem for someone. So I’m trying to have less of that happen. And the way that I’m trying to have less of that happen.

Is some of the things in here. Primarily, some more adversarial testing. Actually, that bottom one is stupid. That was a bad test that we got rid of. So more adversarial testing, especially on the installer. That’s, that’s, that’s gonna be a big one for helping me long term, because that installer process turns out to be the hardest part about this whole thing. Not only upgrades, but like the scripts and everything. That turns out that was the most that is the most difficult part of the whole project. And I’ve also added some automated code review in here. So like whenever someone submits a PR, I have cloud code code review it. And usually it’s good. And usually there’s some back and forth between the like, let’s face it, everyone else is who can everyone who contributes to this is using a coding agent.

So that gets set. It’s just like two things talking to each other. But I added this other layer in there. There’s a different coding agent to hopefully get a different point of view or perspective on, on things as they get is pull requests come in. And that’s code rabbit. code rabbit. It’s a hopeful, apparently free for open source repositories. So I don’t know if my credit card starts getting charged, I’m in trouble. But I added this thing in to hopefully get like, you know, because like something like when I when my cloud makes a pull request or merges stuff. It’s basically done its own code review. So maybe that’s not great sometimes. So I’ve added in another layer here to hopefully catch more stuff before problems arise. But anyway, just a quick update on stuff that’s coming in 2.3 that should be out a little bit later this week. Thank you for watching. I hope you enjoyed yourselves. I hope you learned something. And I will see you in tomorrow’s video where we will talk about well, I don’t know yet. Well, we’ll work it out on the way, won’t we? All right. Thank you for watching.

Going Further


If this is the kind of SQL Server stuff you love learning about, you’ll love my training. Blog readers get 25% off the Everything Bundle — over 100 hours of performance tuning content. Need hands-on help? I offer consulting engagements from targeted investigations to ongoing retainers. Want a quick sanity check before committing to a full engagement? Schedule a call — no commitment required.

The post Performance Monitor 2.3 Release: ErikAI, More FinOps, and MCP Madness appeared first on Darling Data.

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The Agent Era: When “How do I…?” Replaces “Where do I click?”

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After a year away getting to grips with AI and its application across the various industries, I am placing a bet: agents will become the default interface for most knowledge work. Not “a cool feature” and not “a chatbot bolted … Continue reading

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Software Eats Its Own

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Another day another deal which makes you question the meaning of money itself. SpaceX said this morning it has an option to buy Cursor for $60 billion later this year, or pay the coding startup $10 billion for the work they are already doing together, Elon Musk said on his bully pulpit. Chasing the “code” opportunity has been top priority inside xAI, so this adds up.

SpaceX isn’t alone.

Over at Google, Sergey Brin has come out of semi-retirement to personally drive a DeepMind “strike team” whose job is to catch Anthropic in coding. (He wants Gemini to start writing Gemini. Recursive, that.) OpenAI just rolled out a Codex revamp last week with desktop control, memory, and multi-agent workflows aimed at the same target.

And they are all coming to the same conclusion because they are looking at Anthropic with lustful jealousy.

Anthropic says Claude Code is now growing revenues at a $2.5 billion run-rate, a number that has doubled since January 1. Claude Code was launched in May 2025. Six months later it was at $1 billion. Its sales are growing faster than a 1980s F1 monster, pulling the whole company along with it. Anthropic hit $14 billion in ARR in February, $19 billion in March, and around $30 billion this month.

Despite all the hoopla about AGI, and changing the course of human history (and it will), the fact remains that most of these big boys know one thing. Money is in automating software. Money gets the valuations. And valuations get the money.

In plain English, every tier-one AI lab, plus the guy building rockets to Mars, is pouring money, talent, and compute into one thing. Software that writes software. The holy grail (at present) is agents that can code and automate everything. Brin said as much in an internal memo. Anthropic’s own engineers say Claude Code now writes between 70 and 90 percent of their code. A recent analysis found that 4 percent of all public commits on GitHub are authored by Claude. That number was zero eighteen months ago.

And it isn’t just coders. Consider Meta. The company told its US employees this week that their computers will now record mouse clicks, keystrokes, and screenshots while they work. The data will train, in Meta’s own words, “AI agents that can perform work tasks autonomously.” Meta will spend up to $135 billion on AI infrastructure this year, more than the whole company generated in cash in 2025. On May 20, about 8,000 of those same employees, roughly 10 percent of the workforce, get laid off. They are training their own replacements.

Marc Andreessen famously said software was eating the world. Software may be eating the world, but looking around the AI landscape the buffet is starting by very much trying to eat its own. The people who build software are busy wiring up the machines that will build software in their place. Call it automation. Call it augmentation. Call it whatever makes you sleep. What it actually is, is software industrialization, happening right in front of our eyes.

April 22, 2026, San Francisco

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How to get multiple agents to play nice at scale

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Chase Roossin, group engineering manager, and Steven Kulesza, staff software engineer, from Intuit join the podcast to chat about what might be the hardest problem in engineering right now: getting multiple AI agents to work together in a complex system.
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Automating Your AI Context

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From: AIDailyBrief
Duration: 7:35
Views: 879

OpenAI introduced Chronic, a Codex background screenshot memory. The feature improves code context and workflow recall while raising privacy and usage-limit concerns. Anthropic's live-data UX upgrades, White House engagement, expanded bank previews for Mythos, major security incidents, aggressive fundraising, and chip supply constraints highlighted rapid AI adoption alongside mounting operational risks.

The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI.
Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614
Get it ad free at http://patreon.com/aidailybrief
Learn more about the show https://aidailybrief.ai/

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