CS5 Master Colelction onto new SSD drive - copy? install?

I am upgrading my MacBook Pro from 4GB RAM to 16GB and swapping out my hard drive with a SSD drive. Will CS5 Master Collection for students\teachers copy over to the new drive ok or will it need to be installed on the new drive? I am uncertain if the CS5 MC retrictions will allow installation multiple times or on a second drive. Thanks for any help!

1st, the license allows you to install on 2 computers... but you SHOULD DE-Activate on old drive before installing on new drive
2nd, for Windows you MUST install, not copy, so the "registry" is correct... I have no idea how a Mac works

Similar Messages

  • CS5 Master Colelction onto new SSD drive question

    I am upgrading my MacBook Pro from 4GB RAM to 16GB and swapping out my hard drive with a SSD drive. Will CS5 Master Collection for students\teachers copy over to the new drive ok or will it need to be installed on the new drive? I am uncertain if the CS5 MC retrictions will allow installation multiple times or on a second drive. Thanks for any help!

    You will have to install properly or else the activation system won't work. Run the Deactivate option from teh application menu on your old install.
    Mylenium

  • Loading CS5 Master Collection onto new Macbook Pro with no DVD drive

    I have a complete, legitimate, registered version of CS5 Master Collection. I also have a new Macbook Pro with no DVD drive. I have lost the disk, but have the box and confirmation email when I registered the product, with the key code. This product cost alot of money and I really need to get it onto my new machine. Can I do this without having the additional cost of a new DVD drive? I already paid for and own the software with keys so it's not like I'm trying to bend anything or do it for free. Any advice would be appreciated thank you.

    Download the CS5 Master Collection trial version from
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    You must follow the Very Important Instructions on that page first otherwise the links will not work.
    Launch the trial and enter your serial number to license it.

  • HT1727 i copied itune music from old hard drive to memory disk the copied onto new hard drive into itunes and music wont play unless removalbe disk is inserted

    i copied itune music from old hard drive to memory disk the copied onto new hard drive into itunes and music wont play unless removalbe disk is inserted

    Then your iTunes must be looking at the removable disc, not your hard drive. Did you actually copy the songs onto your computer, or simply tell iTunes to look at the removable drive?
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  • Trying to install CS5 Master Collection onto a macbook pro with no disk drive.

    I would like to install my cs5 master collection onto my macbook pro, however it does not have a disk drive...instead, it's an air drive. Does anyone know if there is any way to download these applications without the disks? I attempted to contact customer service, but apparently adobe does not offer customer support for versions below CS6 (which is unbelievable to me). Thanks.

    Download the trial version from http://prodesigntools.com/all-adobe-cs5-direct-download-links.html
    Follow the Very Important Instructions on that page first BEFORE you click the download links.
    Install the trial then enter your serial number to license it.

  • My late 2012 mac mini boots slow with new ssd drive

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    Yes, my solution fixed the issue.  I went from a 47 to 53 second boot time to a 17 second boot time.  The ssd drive is significantly faster than the original drive that came with my late 2012 mac-mini.   This is my first post and I wasn't sure how to post this as a tip.  I have another tip regarding usb 3.0 hubs. 

  • I have replaced my old hard drive with a new SSD drive. Can I restore a complete Time Machine backup

    I have replaced my old hard drive on a MacBook Pro midyear 2010 with a new SSD drive. I have a complete system backup of my old drive in an external hard drive using Time Machine.
    Questions that I would like to get answered.
    1) Can I connect my external hard drive to the macbook pro and use that to boot up my machine by pressing and holding down the Options key? Once booted up successfully, can I use Disk Utility to format the new SSD and then restore the complete time machine backup?
    2) If that is not possible, can I use my old drive which I can connect using a USB adapter and use that to boot up by following the same strategy as listed in Step#1 above?
    3) If neither options are possible, do I need to use a bootable USB drive for Mavericks OS X to boot up the machine,
    I have Mavericks OS X ( 10.9.6) and I do not have a DVD of the OS.
    Any help is appreciated.

    Let me first document the steps that did not work and then I will document the steps that worked.
    1) Replaced the hard drive with SSD.
    2) Connected the original hard drive using a USB adapter to the MacBook to make it behave like an external device.
    3) Powered on the machine and on hearing the chime pressed Command-R to start in recovery mode.
    4) Chose the Disk Utility option to erase and format the SSD. The format chosen was Mac OS Extended Journaled.
    5) Once the formatting was done, then clicked on the "Restore" tab in Disk Utility
    6) In the Source field, dragged my original hard drive from the left pane and placed it in the field
    7) On the destination field, choose the new SSD drive. Clicked on "Restore". Gave me a warning, accepted the warning and the restore was under way.
    8) I had 236 GB to restore so took 3.5 hours before it was done.
    9) Disconnected the external hard drive ( my original internal HDD), shut down the machine and powered on again.
    10) Heard the chime and after that it was a white screen with no Apple logo.
    Was visibly upset and started thinking what my next move will be. Then tried these steps
    1) Again powered off the machine.
    2) Connected my internal HDD once more as an external drive
    3) Powered on and on hearing the chime, pressed Command-R as before
    4) Once the OS X utilities screen popped up, this time chose Install OS X
    5) Erased the contents of SSD once more and reformatted it using Mac OS Extended Journaled.
    6) Installed OS X by following the prompts.
    7) Once the OS was installed, I was presented with an option on how to transfer data to this new Mac
    8) Chose the option to move the data from my original HDD.
    9) Took another 3 hours to move the data.
    10) Removed the original HDD once the transfer was complete, powered down the machine and started it once more.
    11) Booted successfully and all my content is now accessible on the new SSD.
    Moral of the story - It is the spirit that counts.

  • I installed a new SSD drive in my computer and now Adobe Creative Suite Web Premium says I don't have a license. I have license. It was very expensive. I am disabled now, and I need this software working.

    I installed a new SSD drive in my computer and now Adobe Creative Suite Web Premium says I don't have a license. I have license. It was very expensive. I am disabled now, and I need this software working. Adobe Acrobat has been a primary tool for accommodating memory problems after a brain injury. (A car ran me down while I was out getting exercise.) I installed the SSD because I needed my management of PDF files to run faster. I called tech support for help when the software first stopped working, but they needed me to give them a number from my original disks. Because of my disability, I've been having someone come in to clean, and the shelves where I kept my software packages were cleared. I've been hunting for them ever since, but I can't look for them myself for very long at a time. Today I finally found them, but now I can't seem to contact tech support. What happened? I don't want to delete my old files because I need the setup to remain unchanged, because I don't do well with changes. I think all I should need is to have someone located the license file on drive E: and move it to wherever it is needed on the SSD drive, but I don't know what to look for.

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  • I have a MAC Pro from 2011 currently running MAC OS 10.9.5.  This weekend I cloned the MAC HD drive to a new SSD drive for improved performance.  The clone was completed successfully with no errors.  After the clone completed I successfull restarted my sy

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    Boilerplate text:
    Reset Preferences
    http://forums.adobe.com/thread/375776
    1) Close the program and press Ctrl+Alt+Shift/Cmd+Option+Shift during startup (not reversible)
    or
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    --OB

  • Should I put the new SSD drive in main HDD bay or the Superdrive/Optical bay for a Mid-2010 Macbook Pro?

    Hello All,
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    Then the main concern is that, if I adapt option (2) above, placing SSD in the super/optical drive bay and install and running the OS from there, will it decrease the performance (i.e. speed, latency, and etc.) as if i was to put the new SSD in the main drive?
    Also, any suggestions with respect to Samsung 840 EVO vs. Samsung 850 EVO (250GB)? any well-rated HD caddy aside from OWC for moving the main HDD to optical CD bay? and perhaps an external enclosure for the Superdrive?  Thanks in advance for any comment and/or suggestion. 
    - Jack

    Could you provide some rationale(s) behind it?  As far as I know, the mid 2010 Macbook Pro, the HDD is running via the SATA interface at running at 3.0 Gb/s, which is SATA II, and the Super-drive and/or the Optical drive, which is also running via SATA II interface, so I would assume the performance (i.e. primarily in speed) would be similar if not the same by placing the SSD drive in either one of the two places. 
    Also, wouldn't it be better by placing the SSD in the optical so the OEM HDD could be kept in the original main bay since it has the shock-sensing feature there?

  • Do I have to activate AHCI mode on a Mountain Lion after a new SSD drive installation?

    Hello All,
    Do I have to activate AHCI mode on a Mountain Lion after a new SSD drive installation?
    I have a new Corsair GT SSD sata 3 drive on my mack book, I have read on corsair web page that is good tho activate the AHCI and TRIM but I cant find information about how to do this on OS X.
    Thank you all

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  • Need to re-install CS5.5 on my new hard drive. Serial number from disk package not working.

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    Last edited by Trilby (2015-01-05 13:17:05)

  • Approach for fresh OSX install to new SSD drive with restore from TimeMachine

    I have an early 2010 MacBook Pro with running Mavericks with FileVault 2 encryption.  The drive seems to be failing.  I am not able to boot it up.  I get a "Prohibitory" sign with freezing.  I have attempted various recovery steps:  booting with Command-R, running Disk Utility, attempting to do a full restore from TimeMachine, turning off encryption via terminal/command line with no success.  I am not able to mount the disk volume.  DiskWarrior doesn't seem to support bootable Maverick volumes.  I don't the the existing drive deserves additional time.
    I've purchased a new SSD drive and I plan to do a fresh OS install on that drive, followed by a restore of my most recentTimeMachine backup to that drive.  My backups are not encrypted.  Because the current HDD seems to be toast and is running FileVault 2, installing from scratch and then restoring apps and data seems to be the most realistic approach.
    Can somebody please tell me what the preferred sequence of steps would be to do this?  Particularly the initial OS X install?  Since the new drive will not have a recovery partition, I assume that I cannot do Command-R at boot-time to start the install.  My system has a DVD drive, but I don't have a Mavericks install disk.
    Comments appreciated...

    Restart the computer. At the chime press and hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager appears. There should be a disk icon for your Time Machine backup drive. Select it and click on the arrow button below it. This will start you into a hidden Recovery HD on your Time Machine backup drive. Select the Disk Utility option and click on the Continue button.
    1. After DU loads select your SSD (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Note the SMART status of the drive in DU's status area.  If it does not say "Verified" then the drive is failing or has failed and will need replacing.  SMART info will not be reported  on external drives. Otherwise, click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    2. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Apply button and wait until the process has completed.
    3. Select the volume you just created (this is the sub-entry under the drive entry) from the left side list. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window.
    4. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Security button, check the button for Zero Data and click on OK to return to the Erase window.
    5. Click on the Erase button. The format process can take up to several hours depending upon the drive size.
    6. Quit Disk Utility and return to the main menu. Select the Install OS X option and click on the Continue button.
    7. Be sure to select your SSD as the installation target.

  • Having problems cloning a new hard drive to install in Macbook Pro 2012

    I have a 2009 MBP and I just bought a Crucial 256GB SSD drive. I have cloned it a couple of ways (SuperDuper & CCC) and also tried installing my MBP hybrid drive into the new 2012 MBP. Nothing I have tried has worked. What happens is when I boot I hear a loud beep and then in about 15-20 seconds I get the circle with a cross through it. The original drive in the 2012 MBP works fine but obviously I want all my data from my 2009 MBP + my shiny new SSD drive.
    Any ideas?!?

    Do this:
    Install the drive back to your Macbook 2012.  Put your Crucial SSD in a USB enclosure.
    Go to your utilities folder and open Migration Assitant and copy the files or apps over using that.
    Once you've done that and you can see your files and apps on the 2012 Macbook.
    You can now proceed in formatting or erasing your SSD using Disk Utility. Format it MAC OS Extended Journaled.
    Open Carbon Copy and start cloning.  Source Drive your macbook hard drive.  Destination: your SSD.
    Now hit clone - you will get a pop up sayingt that a recovery partition is was not created.  Create one using Carbon Copy.  Once that's done, proceed with the clone.
    Once the clone is done, then install your SSD in your 2012 Macbook and everything should now boot up fine.
    If you find your boot time is taking too long after you've installed your SSD, go to system preferences - startup disk and select your SSD as the startup, restart and you should be up to speed now.
    Good luck and don't do any short cuts - follow these steps so you won't have any issues.

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