It was a question, a doubt. As I explained, I just did an update and it changed what ID did. Back in the day, I started with Adobe CS2. ID, as for what it is, hasn't changed much since then, but the way it works in the background and what it requires from the CPU and RAM has drastically changed. With every version Adobe changed something to the worse, making it more and more less convenient to use. With time you simply learn to live with it. Every new version is a small step towards "unusable". Perhaps the point is reached for me. Means, I need to stick to the older version. Well, regarding the other stuff you mentioned, the actual work with ID, I haven't had the chance to try the 19.3. Maybe there is even more that would freak me out. It's also a matter of point of view . In my POV, exactly those things like syncing unwanted files, CC libraries, sharing or whatever are those things which slow down ID and I don't need them. It's a document design tool, not an asset manager. In my case, the desktop PC I have is an outdated model so that high CPU usage has a bigger impact. However, I'm not forced to install updates, I know, but especially if you work with a version that has bugs, some of them you found yourself, then you hope for them to be fixed one day. You don't know when, but between 17.4 and 19.3 there were a few updates.
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