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All I'm saying is that If you set yourself up for a greater likelihood of potential failure, when you achieve it part of the responsibility is clearly yours. In no way am I forgiving Adobe for not properly coding their software. If I didn't actually DO these things myself I certainly wouldn't feel comfortable in commenting. And it won't work around a bug with another app.Īll I'm saying is that if you assume applications are going to have these kinds of problems - and they do because not all programmers know or follow all the "rules" - you'll be better off in the long run, and you'll get better performance overall to boot. That no doubt took you time and effort, and who knows, it may lead to other problems down the line. This time you found a way to further complicate things in order to work around a Photoshop bug. It's that remaining 5% that I'm talking about! This should probably be bug reported but seeing as how from what I've heard this bug has been around since at least CS2 I'm not sure I have any faith it'll get fixed.ĭespite what Mr Carboni thinks, installing programs on different drives and partitions is older than the floppy disk, and >95% of the time presents no problem. You can test this by editing the keys at that location from X: to C:, photoshop will start without haveing to copy any files as discribed above - HOWEVER - Do not edit the regestry if you don't know what your doing, and be aware that even if you do, changeing those keys will most likey break many other applications untill the keys are reset to their prior settings. Vice versa - that the Installer is ignoring that registry key defining file locations and so photoshop is looking for config files in the wrong place.
#ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS6 WINDOWS#
Photoshop's *installer* is paying attention to the windows registry keys at (which is the key that defines Program Files, X86 Program files, and Common Files locations) but Photoshop itself is ignoring that key, or more likely: The issue here is a bug within Photoshop where either: Be careful if prompted to overwrite files though, on my machine "F:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files" did not exist, your system may be different.ĭespite what Mr Carboni thinks, installing programs on different drives and partitions is older than the floppy disk, and >95% of the time presents no problem. You may wish to try only copying ":\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\ ADOBE" but this didn't work for me, Photoshop must store some files outside the Adobe folder, copying the entire Common Files folder however worked a treat. Copy the entire contents of "C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files" from your SSD /Windows drive (normally C:) to the same location on the drive on which Photoshop is installed, in my case F, so to "F:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files"
#ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS6 INSTALL#
Install Photoshop to a drive of your choice.
#ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS6 WINDOWS 7#
I have 1 SSD and 3 HDDs, Windows 7 installed on C: Photoshop installed on F:, Error 1 on launching Photoshop.
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Had the same problem here, and this thread clued me into the cause enough to come up with a slightly hacky but working solution: