The answer is that licence you buy is for the original full version that you purchased therefore you should not use that original version or any of the upgrades to it on any other than the machine on which it is installed (and as you rightly say a laptop or a machine at home when the main machine is at work).
On 12 Nov 2003, at 16:19, Richard Lewisohn wrote:
I believe one is allowed to use it on two computers (i.e. can be used on a desktop and a laptop). There is a debate raging as to whether this is fair on the Photoshop forum of Robgalbraith.com.
http://www.robgalbraith.com/ubbthreads/showflat.php? Cat=&Number=180030&page=0&view=collapsed&sb=5&o=&fpart=6#Post183833
What isn't clear is the status of older versions of Photoshop if one has upgraded. Are they still 'legal' to use (Photoshop 7 is likely to be adequate to use on a laptop on location, for example).
Best
Francis Newman Webshot Ltd
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