

So, I can't buy that but my parents can buy it for me, or? I know I need some information to proof Adobe that I'm student, or am I wrong? Here in Finland under 18 years old people can't spend over 50 euros in day. but not ALL Microsoft programs are free (Win7 and many programming products are free, MS Office is not free) Not all education organizations have a DIRECT sales site with an agreement with Adobe & Microsoft, so those people must use a general Education sales siteĪnd, yes, SOME Microsoft programs are available for free where I work, via download only. since they sell to anyone who may prove Education status, not just to people associated with a specific University The "general" Education sites such as or do not have pricing quite that low. I am staff at a University, and the online store where I buy Adobe & Microsoft, which has a DIRECT sales agreement with those two companies, has prices that are about 20% of MSRP ($83 for MS Office Pro 2010 + $644 for Adobe CS5 Master Collection) Photoshop) is done through the "All Apps" tab of the "Apps" pane (of the Creative Cloud application itself).>How can you get the 80% discount as a student? Once you are signed in (as per above), the installation of any Adobe application (eg. Enter your Sheridan username & your Sheridan password.When the Adobe CC sign-on interface shows, enter your full Sheridan email address As soon as you proceed to enter a password, the Adobe sign-in window will automatically flip to the Sheridan Single Sign On (SSO) interface.

Once you've taken care of the provisioning as mentioned in the first section above, your Adobe sign-in experience (for classroom workstations and personal devices) is as follows:

Note: Student licensing remains active for one term post program completion, and a notification is delivered via e-mail before the expiry date. To get your Adobe licensing provisioned to your Sheridan account, As an employee or actively-enrolled student, you are entitled to free licensing for Adobe Creative Cloud products.
