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Basically my questions is: how can I install Captivate 5.5 on a workstation which is a member of a domain with group policy, so that the user does not have to be an Administrator on the machine?
No matter what I've tried, the user has to be in the Admin group otherwise we get an error message concerning the license.
I've tried installing it as Technician, installing it as Administrator, making the user an Admin and then installing it and then taking them out of the Admin group. None of these have worked.
I've tried giving all users full control of the Adobe folder. That didn't work either. The PC is a Dell Optiplex 745 with Windows XP.
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Hi,
Can you please provide the license error that your encounter when you use it as user account without admin rights.
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Are you also trying to use custom rights for the user group you are assigning the user too? You might try creating a new default standard user account group and try assigning them to that group to see if you have better success?
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the error was: A problem has occured with the licensing of this product. Restart your computer and re-launch the product.
If this problem still occurs after restarting, contact Customer Support for further assistance, and mention the error code shown at the bottom of this screen.
Error: 213:11
I am trying to avoid creating special permissions groups for this software.
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Goodboyga, I think I tracked down the permissions you will need to modify. This solution is detailed within Install log error "License store does not allow writing" | Creative Suite 5, CS5.5.
By giving read/write access to this location it should resolve the licensing error. I would actually recommend at least giving read/write permissions to the parent folder Adobe and then replace all child object permissions with inheritable permissions from this object. You might even want to consider doing the same step for the Application Data folder as Adobe is not the only application which will be utilizing this folder.
If you are running into additional issues though I would still advise starting with a default Standard user account level of permissions. You can then restrict access as needed while still verifying the Adobe applications function properly.
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Thanks! I'll give it a try tomorrow.
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FYI All local users have Modify permissions to the Application Data folder by default in our organization. Also I've tried giving the user full control of the Adobe folder and all subfolders and I still got the licensing error when I removed them from the Admin group.