When installing on a new PC, you must manually many identical changes, assuming they still exist or haven't been moved. Make few "optional changes", or these will cause more wasted time later. So, unless you prepare ahead of time, prepare to spend time with "better new versions". Got a new PC? Good luck installing your old software that appears the same, since often it will be impossible to even download old versions. Updates mean constantly learning how changes will affect you, or how you can work around them. Any personal "customizations" will likely be lost, or changed completely, from what you originally intended. Understand, that if you auto-update, most every time you encounter the UI, features and appearances will change, sometimes substantially. Because of this, here's a little survival guide to any critical, but seldom used products from Adobe or others: So, we must support ourselves as best we can. Constant updating means we are constantly frustrated trying to learn why features we depended on, were removed or changed, with zero notice, (notice that we had time or interest to reading).įor this reason, we must learn how to use Adobe products without being subjugated to experience what Adobe's target, daily users and therefore, prospective customers. So few of us want the burden of forced learning, for things that have zero or negative value. Sorry, most of us only use Reader less than every week or month. Unfortunately, many companies produce and support products like Adobe Reader, as if their target users had it open ever single day.
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