Hi @Anshul_Nautiyal Thank you.
First it was said:
While Intune can deploy and replace full packages using Supersedence, it will not automatically update individual Adobe applications inside Creative Cloud as Adobe’s own updater does.
Then it was said:
Windows: steps to update CC apps with Supersedence (Win32)
Package the new version…
So can you please clarify above?
- However, macOS is not supported by Supersedence. So how do you automatically update individual Adobe applications inside Creative Cloud for macOS?
Hi @Enquirer11,
Thank you for bringing this up, and apologies for any confusion.
Supersedence in Microsoft Intune allows you to package a new version of an Adobe Creative Cloud application (for example, Photoshop or Illustrator) and have it replace or update an older version previously deployed through Intune. In other words, it updates the entire application package that you create and deploy, not the individual apps within Creative Cloud Desktop. For instance, if you want Creative Cloud Desktop along with selected Adobe apps to update, you must create a bundled package containing all required apps and configure that package with Supersedence. If you only package Creative Cloud Desktop, only the desktop app will be updated.
This approach differs from Adobe’s own updater, which automatically delivers incremental updates to individual applications without requiring you to redeploy anything. With Supersedence, every update requires generating a new package in the Adobe Admin Console, wrapping it as a Win32 app, and deploying it via Intune. It is not a background auto-update mechanism.
Supersedence does not apply to macOS PKG apps, so it cannot automatically update individual Adobe applications on macOS. On macOS, you can use Adobe’s update tools such as Remote Update Manager (RUM), optionally in combination with Adobe Update Server Setup Tool (AUSST), or rely on self-service or managed packages deployed with Creative Cloud Desktop’s native update capabilities.
A common recommendation is to deploy self-service packages to user machines, allowing users to install and update applications themselves. For more information, see: https://adobe.ly/45g6anE
If you need tighter control, you can deploy managed packages to user machines to control which updates are installed. For details on deploying updates, refer to: https://adobe.ly/3UsmHib
I hope this clarifies your query. Please let me know if you need any further assistance.