![]() This was the case with each Adobe application that made the move to be 64bit (Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Premiere Pro, After Effects, Bridge, etc.). There are also times during the development process that the engineers start with a clean slate. Since day one each new major version of InDesign meant a new. Those that use InDesign are used to this. ![]() However, there are times during the course of development that new features require a file format change. This is the way Creative Cloud is supposed to work. For example, in the January update of 2014 you got new features in Photoshop CC and after the update you launched the same Photoshop CC that you had always been launching. From that point on, each new feature update or bug fix merely updated the application (binary) that you already had installed. That was until YOU decided to uninstall the CS6 applications that you were no longer going to be using. With the release of the new Creative Cloud 2014 versions of your favorite Adobe applications, some have been asking the question as to why for example do they now have a Photoshop CC 2014 AND a Photoshop CC in their Applications folder? Do I really need both? These are good questions and hopefully with this post I can help shed some light on this mystery for you.įirst off with the release of the CC Applications last year, you potentially had both your CS6 and your CC applications installed.
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