If you have any of these files, please send them to WWPC, so WWPC can host said: However, for them to host it, they first need to get it, so the following text is a request for all you computer users out there who may have a copy of some or all of these files. The above text was for the WWPC admins, requesting they host it.
Here you can see the name of every single file that was on the page, and yes, I'm hoping WinWorld PC can manage to find copies of all of these, and host them here on the WWPC website. Now here's a screenshot of the old Adobe page in question, via (as it's no longer available on the actual Adobe website). That above list shows how many files for each program were originally hosted at Adobe's website for CS2 activation-free versions. The CS2 files (installers, patches, extras, documents) which previously were available on Adobe's site, but no longer are, are as follows:Īcrobat Standard 7.0 for Windows (1 file) I'm hoping that WWPC can now start hosting these on their own website.
I'm talking ONLY about the versions that previously were available for download, but are no longer available, on Adobe's website, and these versions NEVER required activation (so no cracks were needed for them). Note that I'm NOT talking about other activation-based versions (such as those that came on physical disks) that would now require cracks to get past activation.
While you don't host them yet, I'm hoping that you will at some point choose to host all of the activation-free CS2 versions of Adobe's software on this website. That was a VERY cruel move, but hopefully somebody else can step in to fix the situation. Now that went along fine, until some time last year, when Adobe decided to cut off past customers from EVER BEING ABLE TO REINSTALL THEIR SOFTWARE, by removing ALL of the activation-free CS2 versions of their software from their website. Fortunately at the time they were smart enough to realize that people's computers crash sometimes and may require a reinstall of software if you had to format your drive, so they provided activation free versions for customers (though anybody could download it because they didn't put protections on their website). Years ago Adobe shut down their activation servers for CS2 software (this includes CS2 versions of Photoshop, Indesign, etc), due to the cost of running servers for software no longer supported by Adobe.