For the sake of due diligence, I just uninstalled Reader (I'm sure I
had installed it *after* failing to get an Acrobat license), and then
tried to run Acrobat.  Indeed, the startup process automatically went through an
Acrobat install.  My TCS serial number is still invalid.  Then I went to the 
TCS installer and tried to reinstall Acrobat.  My TCS serial number is still 
invalid with Acrobat.  

So far today, between attempts and emails, I've spent a full two hours on this. 
 At a *cheap* contracting rate, that's 100 dollars.  Overall I'd say I spent 12 
hours on installing TCS2, and still don't have the full product.  At that cheap 
rate, we're talking $600.00 down the drain.  I'm one of the converted, and 
really do want FrameMaker and the rest of the TCS2 products to work.  How would 
this be perceived by a less forgiving customer?

There is no doubt in my mind that the TCS licensing is as squirrely as a Chuck 
Jones cartoon.  

cud




________________________________
From: Mike Wickham <[email protected]>
To: Chris Despopoulos <despopoulos_chriss at yahoo.com>; Frame Users <framers 
at lists.FrameUsers.com>
Sent: Thu, December 17, 2009 10:49:59 AM
Subject: Re: TCS2 Distiller license problem

> I don't have any Acrobat products installed on my machine except what's in 
> Technical Suite, and Adobe Reader 8.

Dov has also warned not to have multiple versions of Acrobat and/or Reader on 
the same computer. So... one version of Acrobat OR one version of Reader OR one 
version of the distiller that comes with FrameMaker. But only one in total.

Mike Wickham



Reply via email to