So install a CS6 suite or single app offline, next, while still offline from the internet, install that 6.2 version that is reporting version 7. I reboot at this point on windows. So reboot if needed.
CS5 and CS6 are on life support. But they can still be activated providing you have the following:1. your original media (disks or downloads) you received at purchase and a way to read them,2. a legitimate serial number for that version, language and platform (Win/Mac) and if it was an upgrade, a qualifying serial number from an older product,3. an older operating system that can support legacy 32-bit apps.NOTE 1 : Creative Suite installers won't work on macOS Sierra, High Sierra or Mojave without terminal workarounds. See the help article below. -cloud/kb/install-creative-suite-mac-os-sierra.htmlNOTE 2: Legacy Creative Suite will never run on Catalina, Big Sur or Monterey. Only the latest Creative Cloud products are compatible.=============Beware of fake Adobe reps who may contact you privately offering to sell you software or take control of your computer. It's a scam, run away! Real Adobe employees will never reach out via Outlook, Yahoo, Gmail or Skype. =============3 Easy Ways to Identify Genuine Adobe Staff
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You assume that the only thing most people want to use is Photoshop and Lightroom, as if all they could want to work with are photos, and if they want to work with any other kind of graphic then they must be graphic design professionals and will have to pay out the nose for it. Well I heavily use Photoshop and Illustrator and do a lot of graphic design as a hobby, not as an income producing career. And it is a serious hobby so I invested in serious software to make it more enjoyable. I said "investment", and that should mean something. The cost of the monthly access for what my creative suite already has is just way too much for me. I have perfectly good programs that I paid an extremely premium price for years ago. So what if it is 10-years old? You speak of that derisionally as if we are lesser human beings scrounging in the gutters while the superior people use "modern software" and walk along gold plated streets. LOL, I'm sorry, but the Creative Suites are so good, they will always be modern in any era or year. It's foolish to talk that way about them. They work beautifully and for way longer than 10 years! They always have. And they should for what we paid for them! These are not frivilous little apps that are meant to become outdated in a few short years, created by a handful of indie developers. My professional suite certainly is not in that category, and they were and are a very valuable investment to me. Heck I still drive a car that is 20 years old! But I took care of it and it runs better than my son's car that is only 5 years old. It still looks good too. It was one of the most expensive cars 20 years ago and I paid a premium for its quality, so I expect to be able to drive it at least another 20 years too! If it looks great and runs like a dream, why not?
There would have been no harm in allowing Creative Suites to still run on the latest systems, and it would have saved Adobe a hoards of customers and future business who have since performed a max Exodus and lost their long held loyalty to the brand. They were never going to do the subscriptions no matter what you did, and Lord knows you threw your worse at them and it made no difference, so why not salvage your relationship with them now and in the future for the things they will be interested in paying for and let them still use their 10-year old CS app on the newer Mac OS systems? Instead you have turned your backs on all of them unless they pay more, angered them with greed, and shot yourself in the foot for future business. If we were talking about CS4 or something on a fully 32-bit architecture, then I could understand. And that is where Adobe made their biggest mistake, by trying to take advantage of the lack of programming knowledge of many of their users to make it appear as if CS6 were a fully 32-bit architecture incapable of running in a 64-bit architecture when it is not, and to make it appear as if the chore and hours involved to modify the code that wants to call 32-bit helper programs was way too expensive and we shouldn't expect them to work for nothing. These things just aren't true. We aren't getting it for nothing. We paid out the nose almost 50x the price of competitor programs when we chose Adobe Creative Suite products, and while we don't expect unending improvements, updates, and telephone support, at that cost we do expect at the very least that we can continue to use our programs on the latest operating systems if we choose to, without any new bells and whistles new releases of Adobe products may have, and without any technical support for how to use the suite. But it should at the very least run, and yes, indefinitely when possible. This was very, very possible. It's not like it has been 60 years. 2ff7e9595c
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