If both CS2 and Cs3 Extended are on my machine and I purchase a CS4 upgrade will the software see the CS2 and allow an upgrade to CS4, or will I be 'shut out' because I have CS3 Extended on the machine? Will I have to uninstall CS3 Extended and then do the upgrade to CS4?
Has anyone done this....seems like one of the two options above should work. Thanks.
Howard
Now that is worrying.
I purchased CS3 from Amazon UK reseller, Citrus, a couple of weeks ago but
they sent CS3 Extended as CS3 was 'out of stock'. I initially rejected the
software but then, against my better judgment, I decided to open the package
and install it.
I'm currently in limbo with Adobe waiting for them to do the upgrade thing
for me and they have just yesterday accepted my proof of purchase receipt
(after much faffing around!). Am I now going to have problems on the upgrade
path?
Dave
Proceed at your own risk or call Adobe. John Nack has already expressed
and interest in giving folks like you an upgrade path.
Bob
My box specifically states "Upgrade from Creative Suite 3.x"
Bob
Bob
But I have to say, it really seems quite ridiculous that you can't 'upgrade'
to CS$ non-extended
Call customer service John Nack has been talking about a path from extended to standard.
Nobody reads post 2
-Rilla
Back to the topic. I have a feeling that the brains in marketing figure that if you have the extended version that there would be no way anyone would want to go back to the standard version. Maybe you should post a comment at john Nacks blog and give him some input and ask him when Adobe will be changing their policy.
-Rilla
is it possible to unlock it? of course. one can even get versions that are pre-unlocked, if one doesn't feel conflicted, especially if you've paid for it anyway. i think the real question is when is it going to become adobe policy?
I think that if they are going to offer a CS3 Extended to CS4 Non-extended upgrade (as they darn well should) I believe the policy should be clear and transparent, available to all, and not one where you have to make support calls and jump through hoops to get it done (I'm not even home during the day to do it over the phone with them). There should be a simple and straightforward and publically obvious way....it should be obvious how to do so from their web site. For heaven's sake, if they can do it with an unlock code then it shoudl be clearly advertised and there should be a simple way to e-mail them your serial number/registration and have an instantaneous unlock code with easy instructions sent back to you. It is hard for me to believe that their marketing department had no inkling that this could be a problem.
-Rilla
Is it legal? From CS3 ext to CS4 non ext, Yes.
i'd like to see that in writing please. got a link?
You will need an unlock each time you want to install the software.
As for the in writing thing… Well… Call tech support and ask. Just say you need to be unlocked, have your serials and the activation code. They will see the upgrade path CS3 ext to CS4 and unlock it for you.
-Rilla
As for the in writing thing… Well… Call tech support and ask. Just say
you need to be unlocked, have your serials and the activation code. They
will see the upgrade path CS3 ext to CS4 and unlock it for you.
What is this? You talk as if your word is good enough, that this is true because you say it is.
We want more than that.
-Rilla
What you're saying may well be correct for all I know. That wasn't my problem.
It was more that it sounded as if you know something you're not sharing, and that always gets me a little edgy. And I agree with Howard that this is a crazy way to deal with it.
It doesn't matter to me personally, I have a suite.
We are all however in agreement :P
As for dealing with it… Adobe does. They do not allow you to unlock the program if it’s a different version – Just check the website. I can tell you however, this is not practiced. If you spent $200 on the product they’ll unlock ya, wouldn’t be good customer service if they didn’t. For the majority of people who read the upgrade paths on the site, they don’t challenge it as we are here. I would guess that for most people it’s not an issue.
-Rilla
Just to let people know, this problem is far from 'fixed' from an Adobe Customer Service perspective has wasted (so far) 5 hours of my time without any resolution. I upgraded to Vista 64 bit to get more memory for Lightroom and Photoshop. Has to install my Extended CS3 then the CS4 Upgrade. Of Course the CS4 upgrade wouldn't recognise the CS3 Extended install. "No problems" I thought - I'll call my friendly customer service people tomorrow during working hours (note I live in Australia so these people are in Manilla). In the mean time I tested CS4 in trial mode
Anyway called Customer Service the next morning (today) and found that CS4 would not even accept the upgrade Serial number as it had decided that it was really a CS4 Extended Version and wanted a Extended Version Serial Number. I was advised that this was a known 'feature' as licence keys are further restricted by the language of the original install. And I had inadvertently left the upgrade install at the default of English (US) whereas my previous CS3 was set to a language of English (International) and once you start the trial it defaults to the version of the installed product rather than the version of the upgrade. ...Sigh.. After lots of fun with customer support and various failed attempts we had to do a complete uninstall of CS4 and a registry clean, a Photoshop Cache delete and a clean install to get back to square one (which is entering a CS4 product key)... Because the full install takes time, the helpful Technical Support person asks me to call back when it is done and gives me a support Case Number etc.
I call back ready for the unlock and quote my Support Case Number. Being a call centre I get a new person. And 'helpfully' all the extra information was not in my case file, just the basics that I had an upgrade issue and that it was resolved (lol). So we start again. This new technical support person says that it is not an approved upgrade path from CS3 Extended to CS4 and that he needs to put me through to Customer Support to explain my options (I barely control my urge to scream!).
After a long wait I spend ages talking to Customer Support who flatly deny that there is any approved path from CS3 Extended to CS4 standard and suggest that I return the upgrade and buy and extended one. I try again and get a second customer support person! Eventually after pushing they agree to try and seek 'special approval' for a non standard upgrade. At this point - after 5 hours of installing, uninstalling and hours on the phone to Adobe I am no closer to having a working CS4 upgrade.
I have escalated to Jack Nash via his Blog to (hopefully) get help. But it is really disappointing to have an issue that was supposedly resolved back in early October 2008 still exist and such challenges tyring to get Customer Support / Technical Support to address it.
My real nightmare is the future... With Windows 7 coming next year and doubtless CS5 in a couple of years... Unless Adobe change their processed I can see a nightmare many days process involving having install the original CS3, then CS4, then the special approval (again!) then CS5 etc... Really Adobe need to join the modern world. Adobe have our serial numbers held against our customer registration Email etc. So we should not have to have older versions installed in series to do an upgrade. Just have the install do an automatic check on-line that we have the most recent version licensed to us... and the on-line code could be e4asily changed to fix problems like this, rather than the rigid activation code installed on the CD.
his new technical support person says that it is not an approved upgrade
path from CS3 Extended to CS4 and that he needs to put me through to Customer
Support to explain my options (I barely control my urge to scream!).
and this is why i'm still complaining about this "back door" policy of going from cs3 ee to cs4 standard. make it right or flat out deny it. but this in between garbage is bush league!
Really Adobe need to join the modern world.
amen.
i'm sorry for your trials geoff. thanks for documenting them.
I'm glad I took the time to study what the Extended version offered when Adobe introduced it. I saw that all that stuff was of no practical use to me and saved the money.
Some people just have to have top of the line regardless. ;)
I think you are right.. The good news is Adobe have agreed to the upgrade. However, totally contrary to the messages by Jack Nash that this is all sorted and now allowed.. Here is the key message back on my customer support case:
Hi Geoff
Good Day!
Thank you for contacting Adobe Asia Pacific Customer Service.
Kindly contact us to proceed with the unlocking procedure.
The escalation I've made has been approved.
This is only a one time exemption.
Regards,
* * name deleted by me ** Adobe Asia Pacific Support
www.adobe.com/go/
Note the one time exemption... So this is a sad situation In several ways.. If Jack Nash is right and this is an approved special upgrade path, then Adobe have a SERIOUS problem in their communication with their customer service and technical support teams as we are talking about whole groups that thing this is not supported and requires escallation and approval... Conversely, if is is (as they say) a one time escallation, the Jack Nash has been misleading people on his blog and he rally ought to appologies and correct it... So silly...
Either way disappointing for such a major company...
Of course I am pleased to have the upgrade approved and customer serice was always unfailingly polite and patient with my increasingly desperate attempts to convince them that this was an acceptable updrade. Now all I need to do is take more time off work to be at my computer during their support hours so I can call, wait for ages in a queue and get the one time upgrade key etc.. Sigh...
Jack,
Thanks. I understand that given that the upgrade logic is hard coded in
the shipped product, this needs to be a call to suppport.
In my view, what needs to happen is that support have the issue clearly
documenteds and say ' of course, sir, give me your two product keys and
lets get this fixed' rather than the current situaiton (for your Asia
/ Pacific call centre at least) where they simply do not know that the
upgrade is supported corporately and have to be begged to escallate to
get special permission etc.. I had to ring several times before I was
even able to find someone perpared to escallate this request. Think og
it.. Ages waiting in a queue. Then the long explanaitons. They they say
"I'm sory sirwe just can;t do that". I hang up. Call again... Until I
eventually get someone wiling to push the issue.
[Man, it's absurd and unacceptable that you (and presumably others) get
this kind of run-around. I don't know why the problem apparently remains,
and I don't quite know how I can push harder for a fix, but I'll keep
trying. In the meantime, sorry to have wasted your time. --J.]
I would also recommend that there is a mention of this o the CS4 upgrade
pages. Perhaps an "*" footnote on the CS4 Extended upgrades that notes
that upgrade to non extended is possible but requires a support call.
Then there would be no sense of this being something that is being hidden
by Adobe to make more money etc.
[Good suggestion. Let me look into that as well. --J.]
He's been pushing - but run into some, um, incomprehension.
Someone can't understand why someone wouldn't want Extended with all it's fabulous features?
Just to let people know that once it was approved, the actual upgrade was and is really painless. Adobe Customer support just give you a special product key for your existing product and the upgrade is accepted...
So I'm sure if Adobe get the customer support confusion out of the way for whether the Extended to Standard upgrade is allowed it will be an easy process in the future
Geoff
So I'm sure if Adobe get the customer support confusion out of the way
for whether the Extended to Standard upgrade is allowed it will be an
easy process in the future
not as easy as popping in a disk and running setup.