![]() ![]() Click “Next”Ħ) Now you get a chance to select the Apps you’d like to remove via this tool. Click this.ĥ) Give your uninstall an appropriate name and an output location. Scroll down until you can see a section called “Create Uninstall Package”. This will show a warning that CCP is not for CC2019 usage. The CCP will do some background work that can between a few seconds, and up to 15 minutes (in one rare instance!)Ĥ) Shortly, you should be back at a more…responsive page. In this example, I’ve gone for the lower section.ģ) The CCP App will relaunch and you’ll need to log into an Admin Adobe ID. If you’re happy with these terms, click “Accept”Ģ) On the product selection screen, select the product your institute has purchased. For future usage, you can launch this directly on this Mac from /Applications/Utilities/Adobe Application Manager/CCP/CreativeCloudPackager.app Generating an Adobe Uninstallerġ) Once you’ve got the CCP App open, you’ll need to review the Software License Agreement. ![]() If you already have a copy installed, launch this from your Mac from the location /Applications/Utilities/Adobe Application Manager/CCP/CreativeCloudPackager.app and skip this section.ġ) Navigate to the Adobe Admin console at Ģ) Login with an Adobe Admin ID who has access to your portalģ) Click “Packages” then “Tools” and then “Download for Mac” in the “Creative Cloud Packager” sectionĤ) Once downloaded, mount the “CCPLauncher” disk image and open the “CCPLauncher” App insideĥ) The App will firstly download the most up to date version of the CCP App, then ask for Admin rights to install this on the local device.Ħ) Once finished up, the launcher will also open the main CCP App. So first of all, let’s cover getting a copy of the Adobe Creative Cloud Packager (CCP). Downloading and ‘Installing’ Adobe Creative Cloud Packager Please Note: Adobe Creative Cloud Packager (CCP) is not compatible with CC2019 and so you could argue it’s days are numbered! While the tool is still available, feel free to utilise it as required. ![]() In that case, this post might be of help to you! Or maybe you’re not sure exactly what versions of Adobe products you have installed on your fleet, and just want to remove them all. ![]() However, not everyone has kept these packages or fancies digging around the CLI tool. You can also use the installed Command Line Tool to uninstall products, as long as you can look up the specific sapCodes and baseVersions ( more info). If, when building your deployment packages, you kept the matching uninstaller packages, you can use these to uninstall the specific versions of your Adobe products. Additionally, this is required if you’re moving from Device Licensing (Legacy – aka DL), to Shared Device Licensing (SDL) and CC2019. On a serious note, as part of most Adobe CC2019 deployments you’ll want to remove any previous Adobe Applications you have installed. So I was thinking….what’s the longest blog title I can legitimately use? Migrating macOS Devi… on Migrating macOS Devices from o…ĭazwallace on Moving devices from Adobe Shar… Richard Glaser on Changes to Docker Desktop for… Stephan Peterson on Submit Jamf inventory update o… Jamf Pro, Intune* and the Jamf Cloud Connectorĭeploying Docker Des… on Changes to Docker Desktop for….Recommended workflow to deploy Adobe software with Jamf Pro.Submit Jamf inventory update on OS changes. ![]()
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