Anybody who downloads the new CS6 Suite and then deletes it, be warned.
If you have older versions of other products, it may render them useless.
Just happend to me with Adobe Acrobat 8 Pro installed from Creative Suite 3.
I installed CS6 and it deleted the Acrobat exe. file. When I uninstalled CS6, I was not longer able to use Acro 8.
So, I reinstalled it from the original disc and it loaded but will no longer accept the serial number for it.
Support is worthless. They are not help at all.
Be warned.
In this day and age of virtualization environments, anyone wishing to evaluate a product would be well to try it first in a virtual machine, and avoid the chance of corrupting your critical work environment.
I use VMware Workstation, myself.
And as Pat has said, there are various restoral options, e.g., on Windows from restoring a system image to using the System Restore function.
-Noel
there are various restoral options, e.g., on Windows from restoring a
system image to using the System Restore function.
Even searching and deleting the Adobe Registry keys does wonders.
Adobe's cleanup utility used to do this but not sure if it has been
updated to clear CS6 registry keys. In my case I did a complete
reinstall of Windows because I wanted to start all over again on my machine.
After restoring my system to an earlier date, the file was still missing.
So, I deactivated and completly unistalled the Creative Suite 3 bundle which had Acrobat in it, then reinstalled it and opened one of the other products first, then entered the Serial number, reactivated and it worked.
Calling support was a waste of time. Got hung up on the first time. And, trying to understand the techs is tough because they have pretty thick accents. Pretty sure they are based in India. Nothing against that, but makes for a real experience when you are trying to communicate with someone in English and that is obviously not their first language
Thanks for all the replys.
You can certainly install CS6 next to an existing copy of CS5.5 or earlier, and all the other applications will run happily side by side (many of us who teach or work on development have more than one version installed, sometimes three) but Acrobat is a special case. Because of the way Acrobat/Distiller hooks into the operating system and other applications (such as Office) two versions cannot be installed at the same time, so if you install Acrobat X as part of CS6 it will remove any previous version (you are notified of this).
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