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Hi,
We have a Windows Server we would like to install Acrobat Pro alongside the basic Acrobat Reader, as we only have a limited number of Pro licenses but other users need to just open PDF's normally.
I understand this is possible but when I try install the basic Reader alongside the existing Pro installation it simply says Reader is already installed and when you close the installer it just opens the Pro version which requires licensing.
Has anyone come across this and able to assist?
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Just ran into a similar issue. I created a "User" group within Adobe Admin without a license associated with it and assigned it to the users. It allowed the users to login to Acrobat Pro and use it as Reader without the license. Now it did tell the user the first time they signed in that they needed to buy and their trial had expired, but that message was able to be closed and the product is usable without having to do a series of uninstalls and installs. This originated as a security group in AD, we then synced it through AAD into Adobe's Identity Management (OIDC). In the Users and Groups section it pulled the group in and into Adobe Admin. All users in the security group have been created in Adobe without having a license associated.
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Hi Delodien
Hope you are doing well and sorry for the trouble.
Installing Acrobat Reader DC and Acrobat Pro DC on the same machine is not recommended as it may cause some unexpected behavior of the apps since Reader is the subset of Acrobat Pro.
Hope this information will help
Regards
Amal
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I'm afraid this doesn't exactly help, I require a copy of both Pro and Reader installed together and understand this is possible but I keep receiving the error.
So hopefully there is a better solution.
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Hi there
As suggested earlier, its is not recomended to install both the applications on the same device.
Also, you may sumbit your request with the engineering team using the link - https://www.adobe.com/products/wishform.html
Regards
Amal
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I cannot find any document published by Adobe that says it is not recommended to install both Acrobat Pro and Reader DC on the same machine.
I need both and had both for many years. It was only yesterday when Adobe auto-updated my 32-bit Reader to a 64-bit Reader that a problem developed. Now I can't have both on the same machine which means I need to tell my boss that she has to choose between having access to our Company Database or having Acrobat Pro on her computer.
A better solution would be to fix the new incompatibility.
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Amal, as a PDF form creator I always have to check that what I created with Acrobat Pro works well with Acrobat Reader.
So I need to have both software installed on my PC.
Do you have a better solution for me?
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My company uses a massive MS Access Database. The Database uses Reader DC because almost no one on the network has Acrobat Pro. Yesterday Adobe updated my 32-bit Reader to 64-bit without notifying me. It broke the Database because the necessary library was removed. I found the new 64-bit library and updated the Database. But now EVERY computer on the network must use the 64-bit Reader DC.
One computer on the network -- naturally the boss / owner -- also has Acrobat Pro. Until I install 64-bit Reader on that computer, the Database won't even open! When I try to install Reader DC, Adobe just says its already installed.
I have to get the boss back on the Database which means I need to get 64-bit Reader on that computer.
Please help.
BTW, it worked fine with 32-bit Acrobat Pro and 32-bit Reader DC both on the same computer.
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what still might work = parallel installation of the 32-bit-version of Adobe Reader and older (full) Acrobat versions. download availabe: https://get.adobe.com/de/reader/otherversions/
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We have the same problem and more.
We need Reader for those occasional users who can't justify Pro DC full time.
And on some computers, there are multiple users - one that needs Pro DC and one that needs only Reader.
Individual Pro DC licenses are very expensive.
And when an occasional Pro DC user has to log in, the Authentication Code comes to the app on my phone. I haven't checked yet if this problem can be overcome.
Please Adobe - make Reader accessible again when Pro DC is also installed!
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Hi @chiefshakes
Hope you ar edoing well, please go through the help page https://helpx.adobe.com/acrobat/kb/about-acrobat-reader-dc-migration-to-64-bit.html and see if that works for you.
Regards
Amal
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Just ran into a similar issue. I created a "User" group within Adobe Admin without a license associated with it and assigned it to the users. It allowed the users to login to Acrobat Pro and use it as Reader without the license. Now it did tell the user the first time they signed in that they needed to buy and their trial had expired, but that message was able to be closed and the product is usable without having to do a series of uninstalls and installs. This originated as a security group in AD, we then synced it through AAD into Adobe's Identity Management (OIDC). In the Users and Groups section it pulled the group in and into Adobe Admin. All users in the security group have been created in Adobe without having a license associated.
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