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If an Adobe CS6 Production Premium user requests Adobe InDesign CS6 or Adobe Acrobat Pro X (neither of which are included in the Adobe CS6 Production Premium suite), the license file used by the suite would be overwritten by the license file used by the individually licensed application.
What is Adobe's best practice for handling these kinds of requests so we don't break CS6 suites when deploying individual CS6 applications? Especially as the individually licensed application is not part of the suite the user currently has installed.
Thanks,
Don
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Hi Don,
Installing/Licensing InDesign CS6 after installing Production Premium suite doesnt impact licensing of suite. You need to create different packages or serialization file for both of these products and run them separately. please let me know if this doesnt work.
Acrobat X standalone application is not supported (probably not required since it is already msi/pkg) by AAMEE. you can deploy and serialize Acrobat X separately.
but licensing of all products should remain intact.
thanks,
Rahul | rbaiswar@adobe.com
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Hi Rahul,
Thanks for the response, the method in which Adobe store license keys has always been a but fuzzy.
We can package these with AAMEE:
Adobe CS6 Design Standard
Adobe CS6 Design & Web Premium
Adobe CS6 Production Premium
Adobe Premiere Pro CS6
Adobe Photoshop CS6
Can InCopy CS6 be packaged with AAMEE?
We know how to package Acrobat Pro X.
Don
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Don,
InCopy CS6 can be packaged by AAMEE 3. We've done it here.
- Patrick
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Patrick Fergus wrote:
Don,
InCopy CS6 can be packaged by AAMEE 3. We've done it here.
- Patrick
Patrick, thanks for confirming!