I had commented already, but since I used another company name in an analogy, I was censured and my comment never made this thread.
ADOBE FLASH CS6 TRIAL VERSION X64 BIT SOFTWARE
Now every day we start our machines we look at your logo as a representation of an arrogant monopoly with software more trouble than it's worth that we can't wait to find a way to free from. I've literally purchased hundreds of thousands of dollars of Adobe software in that time. I've been an Adobe customer for over 20 years. Lastely: Accusing your customer base of gripping is just icing on the cake for those looking for a way to tranisition to cheaper/better alternatives. We're left to help eachother and fend for ourselves. The ONLY thing you had going for you was customer service. The issue is this: We are all basically forced to pay premium prices - now essentially endless rental rates - for marginal software enhancements nobody asks for, buggy installs, endless updates, and worseining customer service.
ADOBE FLASH CS6 TRIAL VERSION X64 BIT LICENSE
I got an error.Īnd when I attempted to implement the "solution" (renaming the ap support folder) I then get the license error.įinally I figured it out on my own - which basically meant un-installing and re-installing all of CC (on five machines). Lets have a look at what this "resolved" issue looks like. I could go on about other unresolved bugs in this product but I have a suspicion they will also fall on similarly deaf ears.Īnyway, my suggestion to everyone affected is take Chris at his word, and post complete system information (OS version, Adobe Application Manager version, CS6 or CC version) in this forum. Support was of zero help - they treated me like I was trying to scam them out of a machine license or something.Īt minimum Adobe should have an alternative or fallback method of licensing the product that is reliable for the few remaining paid customers (I feel like I need to emphasize that) that are affected by this bug.
In my case, the only fix I could find was a complete wipe and reinstallation of the OS and all of the software on the machine before the licensing issue would go away. And they certainly wouldn't be met with an incredulous "support" team on the phone acting like this is the first time they've heard of the issue. The griping isn't random - if Adobe were interested in fixing this problem you wouldn't be looking at 15 pages of this going on for months and months.
These people have tried, and tried, and supplied information, and done as you suggest, and still the problem happens.