I was wondering if someone could help me. I own Adobe Photoshop 3.0 Deluxe Edition for Macintosh. It does not have a registration card, however in the Getting Started guide it says the following:
“If you’re installing Adobe Photoshop for the first time, the serial number is located on the Read Me first card, on the first page of the Adobe Photoshop User Guide, and on the back of the Adobe Photoshop Program Disk.”
As the first two options don’t apply to me, I’ve looked at the back of the CD. I see a code in the form of ADOBE-3-XXXXX (SPACE) XX (SPACE) XX at the back of the CD which need to be inverted by a mirror in order to read properly. I’ve entered this code numerous times but the program keeps saying ‘An invalid serial number has been entered’.
I know that this software is antiquated, but it would be fantastic to get this software up and running – any help will be appreciated.
Thanks
If you really want to run Photoshop, I'd look for a more recent release. The last version of Photoshop to work in SheepShaver (OS9.0.4) should be version 6 (I run 5.5 myself). Version 7 required OS9.1.
In addition to Photoshop, the following image editors work in SheepShaver (OS9.0.4):
* xRes 2
* Painter 3.1
* Corel Photo-Paint 8 LE
I think I picked up all of these for free on magazine coverdiscs. You might find them downloadable somewhere as well.
three cap letters with a stream of numbers, then a hyphen and 3 numbers.
Photoshop 2.5.1 thru 6 had this format it totaled 17 digits.
Adobe Photoshop 3.0 Deluxe Edition for Macintosh (and Adobe Illustrator
5.5)
Or is this Adobe Photo Deluxe 3.0 -- a long discontinued junior product? You haven't said where you acquired this software, but there could be questions about its legitimacy -- there is a lot of bogus software in the secondary markets. New software has a vehicle for product registration; older Adobe software was typically by postcard, fax or telephone response.
Older serial numbers were typically 3 letters followed by 3 digits, 1 letter, 7 digits, hyphen, and 3 digits. In addition, Adobe serial number, while typically in small to very small type, are never backwards requiring a mirror to view.
I may not be able to use the software then. I'm running Mac OS 9 in an
emulator (Sheepshaver) which is running on Win XP.
Possibly, there may be a problem with the accuracy of the emulator software.
Neil
Possibly, there may be a problem with the accuracy of the emulator software.
Sheepshaver is pretty solid. Older Adobe apps run well in it. If we are discussing 'Adobe PhotoDeluxe Home Edition 3' then that should run okay in Sheepshaver as well.
I think that any reference to the S/N being on the back of the disk must have refered to the Floppies version — S/Ns have never been provided directly on the CDs.
I think that any reference to the S/N being on the back of the disk must
have refered to the Floppies version
Shaz is not looking at a floppy disk when they refer to 'at the back of the CD'. The confusion is over the production batch number on the CD media, which is different than the user license serial number. These are different numbers. Unless the white serial number sticker was applied by the user to the CD, the CD will not have the program's serial number.
Example image: OMR-014 <http://stommel.tamu.edu/~baum/boots/MISC/BEATLES/MFSL/ABBEY_ROAD_MFSL_BOOT/Actual_CD.jpg>
But the Guide to which she referred, mentioned S/Ns being on the "back of Disks" and they have never been there on Adobe CDs … as far as I can recall.
Firstly, thanks for all your help - I do appreciate it. I purchased the software from a shop quite a while back. I got Adobe Photoshop 5.5 and Adobe Illustrator 5.5 both complete and boxed (CD versions). I assumed the serials would be with the documentation, but after looking through it there was no reference to a number. I guess from the forum posts it seems the serials must have been removed beforehand, leaving me with useless copies of great software. Is there anything that can be done short of just learning from the documentation?
Thanks
Is there anything that can be done short of just learning from the documentation?
I am afraid that you were "had" by that shop — and that those programs' S/Ns had already been registered to someone else and used a s part of an Upgrade Path.
It is not going to be worth your time bothering with that old documentation — you would probably do much better to buy one of the excellent third-party books about the current CS4 versions.
Is there anything that can be done short of just learning from the documentation?
Scrap the idea of using Sheepshaver for learning. The only reason any of us use it is to run a vintage operating system to open vintage documents that do not fare well in more modern apps.
If you want to learn photo editing (graphics), you would do much better to run GIMP (gimp.org) natively on your XP machine (or purchase a more modern version of Photoshop). GIMP, Photoshop, Illustrator, etc. run on both Windows and Mac (with the versions appropriate to the respective systems). There is no need to be jumping through hoops to run an old emulated system. Free, GPL graphic software available today is better than the commercial software you are trying to run in OS9.
Just one word if you're strapped for cash: GIMP.
If I remember, after you install v3.0, there might be an up date for v3.0.1.
Mike
Okay, I'll look for that on the CD but but could that do anything toward making the program usable?
Serial numbers were not placed directly on Adobe CDs. If you do not have a serial number as described on the back of the media sleeve or case, a registration card, or pasted into the front page of the manual, you are out of luck unless you can get your money back.
===
Ann and Nini,
Adobe did place serial numbers on small labels that were affixed directly onto one of the floppy diskettes for the app or font (I believe on the back side). The number was also on a label for the registration card which would have been mailed or faxed in. And there was another label you could affix to the title page of the user guide.
I am looking at some right now. It is on standalone GoLive 6 and on standalone Illustrator 10 aaand standalone InDesign 2 (not CS2, 2),and standalone Photoshop 7. A twin-sticker with labels than can be peeled off to be placed elsewhere. (Yeah I have all those standalones still laying around). Above those 2 labels it says "The serial number labels below are for your convenience. Affix them in a safe place for future reference. After installing this software, you will need your serial number for accessing technical support and for purchasing upgrades" . So yes, serialnumber actually were stuck to the cd-case.
actually, they have been stuck on to the CD-case.
That's precisely what Ann has been saying. The label is on the case, not the disc itself. :)