Adobe Acrobat 9 Pro Extended Free Download For Windows 11

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Eboni Kleifgen

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Aug 5, 2024, 6:10:04 AM8/5/24
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Ihope someone can please help me concerning a problem that is happening to me when I try to install the extended Asian Language font package for Adobe Acrobat Reader DC to be able to view certain documents in pdf format. When running the installer I am getting the following error message:

Hope you are doing well and sorry to hear that. Please try to create a new test user profile with full admin rights in Windows or enable the root account in Mac and try using the application and installing the 64 bit font pack there and see if that helps.


If it still doesn't work, please remove the application using the Acrobat Cleaner Tool - -docs/acrobatetk/tools/Labs/cleaner.html, reboot the computer and reinstall the application using the link - and check.


Please check if you have 32 bit or 64 bit Adobe Acrobat Reader DC. If you have a 64 bit version of the application please try to download the font pack from the help page -pack-spelling-dictionary-64-bit-windows.html and see if that works for you.


Till now i have tried wtih 32 bit version. After your message i have installed 64 bit ver of adobe reader dc and downloaded the 64 bit font pack from the link you shared. However, the issue is still same.


Anyway back on topic. Try and uninstall it then re-install. If it doesn't work contact adobe and tell them your problem; make sure they help you! If it persists sell soul to the devil, or try running it in compatibility mode.


I have been having a similar problem with Acrobat 9 Pro Extended. I am on the Adobe LiveCycle Forum and a couple of other users have posted alongside my post stating that they too are having the same problem. Bottom line - you are not alone!


In Vista, Acrobat 9 Pro tended to go logger-heads with the UAC, and thus had to be installed as Admin. With earlier builds of Vista had to go so far as logging in as Admin (NOT simply an account with admin priveleges, but the actual Admin account which is actually disabled by default, and needs to be turned via Local Security Policy snap-in (not available on "home" versions of Vista))


Am now primarilly running Win7 RC1 x64, and really have had zero issues on both notebooks, using the original install. After original install, automatically downloads the x64 component add-on, opens and prints just fine both locally and from both Firefox 3.5 and IE8, no crashes what-so-ever. PDF print-engine also working without any hiccups, as does Distiller.


Have found however that the update to build 9.1.2 strips out all the Acrobat icon caches and kills the thumbnail previews, often displaying a blank page for the icon... thus am running original build on both notebooks (both running Win7 x64).


Now, I can think of the most likely candidate for Acro Pro 9 crashing, and it has NOTHING to do with x64 compatibility. BOTH the Acro Pro executable (C:\Program Files (x86)\Adobe\Acrobat 9.0\Acrobat\Acrobat.exe) AND the updater executables (C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Adobe\Updater6\Adobe_Updater.exe & AdobeUpdaterInstallMgr.exe) MUST be running with elevated (admin) privileges.... especially the updater components, or else Windows will not allow updates to be applied. My guess is that if Acro Pro 9 is trying to perform ANY tasks which it has not the permission for (due to not being run as elevated task), Windows shuts it down as a matter of self-preservation.


The only other possibility I can think of off hand is that there may be a compatibility issue with Acro's 2 start-up processes, AcroTray and Adobe Acrobat (acrobat_sl.exe) - they are both x86 process so is highly possible. I automatically disable any start processes Acrobat adds as a matter of course via MSConfig (I don't see need to add 30 seconds to my boot time to save a couple of seconds on loading a PDF). Would be more inclined to think it would be the latter process though, as AcroTray remains as a running process after opening a PDF anyhow.


Now, I can think of the most likely candidate for Acro Pro 9 crashing, and it has NOTHING to do with x64 compatibility. BOTH the Acro Pro executable (C:\Program Files (x86)\Adobe\Acrobat 9.0\Acrobat\Acrobat.exe) AND the updater executables (C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Adobe\Updater6\Adobe_Updater.exe & AdobeUpdaterInstallMgr.exe) MUST be running with elevated (admin) privileges.... especially the updater components, or else Windows will not allow updates to be applied. My guess is that if Acro Pro 9 is trying to perform ANY tasks which it has not the permission for (due to not being run as elevated task), Windows shuts it down as a matter of self-preservation.

.....


BUT... Acrobat 9 is not a stable product. It does sometimes stop responding; I c an't for the heck of it get Read Out Aloud working. PDFMAKER disappears in the Registry so that sometimes you can't create a tagged PDF from WORD. Things like that. Damn annoying, in fact.


Maybe that was a bug which finally got sorted out. I do remember when Vista first rolled out, couldn't for the life of me get Acro Pro (v8 from memory) without activating full admin account and installing from there... one of only 2 apps I had to do this with.


anyone came up with a solution yet?

it's becoming irritating

it just closes down

with no reason

no error messages

no nothing

did any of u manage to get around it?

:confused:

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