Settings and activity
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An error occurred while saving the comment Anonymous commentedI think the explanation is the following : my Adobe Enterprise ID does not include access to Adobe's Document Cloud, most probably for data protection reasons. Is there a way to get back to the previous, purely "local Hard Drive", system ? If not, it would be a good idea to let users of future versions specify which way they work : with or without signing in the Document Cloud.
An error occurred while saving the comment Anonymous commentedThank you. This was my guess too. I'm always surprised that data on clouds is considered better protected as far as privacy is concerned, than on the local hard drive, but anyway...
Is there a way to be automatically connected at startup, instead of manually ? I don't have to log on Creative Cloud with the other apps. Why is it so with Acrobat ?An error occurred while saving the comment Anonymous commentedMacOS 10.15 Catalina
Acrobat Pro DC 2019.021.20048
Adobe Enterprise ID (eric.pebret@sncf.fr)It appears that the list is not actually emptied at startup : I have tried closing the app, then the OS, and it still shows the files I opened this morning (see scrennshot). I can no longer see any of the files I opened last week, or the weeks before, though (wherein all my commonly used files could be easily found, using the search function).
This part of Acrobat's previous versions worked perfectly fine, I can only regret them...
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It appears that the problem is Microsoft Onedrive-related. The same file stored in a purely local hard drive folder works perfectly fine with "starring" in Acrobat DC...
It is just a shame that the "always keep on hard drive" option does not allow this function to work (Acrobat understands the file with its Sharepoint link and not its local path).