![]() It stalled our work for the entire day and literally lost us income. ![]() It's just absolutely horrendous and inexcusable. We have the 'All Apps' plan and we wasted a full working day just waiting for all of them to finish updating. As hellobub carefully explained.Īdobe CC is a frustrating pile of trash. I don't know if you actually work at Adobe and are in their HQ, but if you are, you pulling something like Illustrator in less than a minute obviously means nothing at all. One of those hours was wasted by just being stalled at 79%. Adobe CC, however? Downloading Illustrator, which as you said is also around 2GB, took slightly less than 2 hours. My company uses super fast fiber cabled internet and we can download any 2GB file in less than a minute as well. But there is probably no way you could, so that's forgiven.Īdobe CC is, however, a complete joke of a program. The only thing you're clarifying is your complete disinterest in helping to fix the issue. Whether they refuse to pay enough to not be throttled by their cloud services, or they simply are bogged down with their own offices.īetween the speed issues and CC just randomly stalling at percentages for no discernible reason, I can honestly say, the price charged for CC apps vs the quality provided does not seem equitable. It is a definitive speed issue on adobe's part. In fact, I just tried Bing's generic speed test and got 189.94mbps down 124mbps up. While I can do speed tests all day long of 90+mbps across different sites and vendors. The MAX i have seen adobe pulling data down at is 5.2mbps small b. I am also having significant download issues with CC 2 days of trying to get the apps installed for a user. Downloading a file you host locally isn't a test of adobe's download speeds its a test of your own servers and network. Which is why that person can download a 2GB file in less than a minute. Thus ProDesignTools is simply crossing the local lan similar to accessing a file share. I would bet that prodesigntools the user is on the same network as where the files linked to are actually located. Those links and files are hosted at not adobe's normal addresses ![]() Had a thought looking at the links ProDesignTools posted.
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