Thanks,
That sounds like the same upgrade experience I've had with Photoshop,
although I did not start with the student/education version there.
I installed CS3 on my [then] new laptop which did not previously have
Photoshop. I only had to type in the code from CS2 to prove I was
"upgrading".
I keep hearing from other people that the "student/education" versions
aren't eligible for upgrade, and it gets me kind of hyper.
From: Paul Sorenson
I purchased a student version of LR2. You just have to go to the Adobe
web site to get your activation code. There was no problem upgrading
through all the iterations of v2.x and I purchased v3 as an upgrade,
since I'm no longer a student. Installation went without a hitch.
Each small change to v2.x was done without re-entering the code. When
installing the upgrade to v3 you have to enter both the old v2 code and
the new v3 code. This is done to prove you have a previous version,
since you only paid the upgrade price, not the cost of a full version.
-p
On 8/4/2010 9:22 PM, William Robb wrote:
>
> --------------------------------------------------
> From: "John Sessoms"
> Subject: Semi-OT: Adobe upgrade policies
>
>
>> I think the "Student" version that has to be activated through Adobe
>> might not be able to be upgraded, but does anyone know about the
>> "Education" version that has a serial number?
>
> Ya know, if you'd sent that to Adobe help, you'd probably get a better
> answer.
>
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