Adobe Flash Professional CC 2014 v.13.0 User Manual
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On the Macintosh, browse to Macintosh HD/Applications/Adobe Flash CS3/Configuration/.
First Run folder
This sibling to the application-level configuration folder facilitates sharing configuration files among users of the same computer. Folders and files
in the First Run folder are automatically copied to the user-level configuration folder. Any new files placed in the First Run folder are copied to the
user-level configuration folder when you start the application.
Typical paths to the First Run folder are as follows:
In Windows XP or Vista, browse to boot drive\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe Flash CS3\language\First Run\.
On the Macintosh, browse to Macintosh HD/Applications/Adobe Flash CS3/First Run/.
User-level configuration folder
Found in the user profile area, this folder is always writable by the current user. Typical paths to this folder are as follows:
In Windows XP or Vista, browse to boot drive\Documents and Settings\username\Local Settings\Application Data\Adobe\Flash
CS3\language\Configuration.
On the Macintosh, browse to Macintosh HD/Users/username/Library/Application Support/Adobe/Flash CS3/language/Configuration/.
All-user-level configuration folder
Found in the common user profile area, this folder is part of the standard Windows and Macintosh operating system installations and is shared by
all users of a particular computer. The operating system makes available to all users of the computer any files placed in this folder. Typical paths
to this folder are as follows:
In Windows XP or Vista, browse to boot drive\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Adobe\Flash CS3\language\Configuration\.
On the Macintosh, browse to Macintosh HD/Users/Shared/Application Support/Adobe/Flash CS3/language/Configuration/.
Restricted Users configuration folder
For users with restricted privileges on a workstation, typically, in a networked environment, only system administrators have administrative access
to workstations. All other users are given restricted access, which usually means that these users can’t write to application-level files (such as the
Program Files directory in Windows or the Applications folder in Macintosh OS X).
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