![]() This change may create issues for customers–if a package for an appropriate version of a particular title has not been previously built (i.e. The CC 2017 versions of the applications do seem to be available via the Creative Cloud Desktop App (CCDA), however these CC 2017 titles appear to have been revised to no longer include Dolby software. These titles are no longer available for Enterprise packaging via the Creative Cloud Packager or the Admin Console Cloud Packager. As a result some versions of some Creative Cloud software titles are no longer available, and as of Novemthe following professional titles are affected: Recently Adobe ended a licensing agreement with Dolby, “ moving to native Operating System (OS) support for Dolby Digital decoding (reading Dolby files) and…no longer provid support for encoding (writing) Dolby Digital and Dolby Digital Plus sound formats in the current and future releases of Creative Cloud.” Adobe will now rely on native OS decoding of Dolby media for playback (supported by OS X 10.11+ or Windows 8.1+) and the ability to create Dolby media will be removed. If the currently-installed serial number will soon expire, users will be notified with a warning similar to this (thanks to Chris Helming on MacAdmins Slack for the screenshot):Īlso note it seems to be a rule of thumb that serial numbers expire about one year after the end of the Creative Cloud for Enterprise agreement, which seems to be a gracious amount of time to allow for a new agreement to be hammered out. Serial numbers designated in the licensing website with a “SN YYQ” designation expire at the end of the quarter designated by “Q” and the year that ends with the last two digits designated by “YY”, keeping in mind that quarters are calculated using Adobe’s fiscal year which starts on December 1. And note that our FY begins on December 1st. ![]() ![]() > For colleagues who have serial numbers such as SN194, SN201, This caused me to reach out to our Adobe rep for clarification: > So the SN184 key expires in (April?) 2018? A couple of quick searches led to this post by Alister Black on Adobe’s discussion forums: Which led to a discussion of why one serial number was better than the other, including asking “How does one know when their Creative Cloud Enterprise serial number is going to expire?” For those with sufficient rights to the Adobe Licensing Website, the code (for example “SN184”) is available there:īut what this code meant was unclear. Yesterday in #adobe on MacAdmins Slack, Nate Felton asked the following question about what he sees on the Adobe Licensing Website:
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |