Now how can you tell how much you have or how much you have left? Let me get out of this thing right here. ![]() But let's talk about Creative Cloud storage itself. There's a lot of advantages to that, but that might be another topic for a different video. You don't need to actually have a full team. And by the way, you can upgrade to teams just as one person. So if some people aren't using all their storage, other people get to use more than 1,000, that's pretty cool. And in fact, it's even better than that, because Adobe lets teams members pool all of the storage space. Now if you're a member of teams or enterprise subscription, because the honchos have purchased a larger number of subscriptions for everybody to use, then each individual user gets 1,000 gigabytes or one terabyte per user. So how much space do you have and how can you get more? With every Creative Cloud subscription, you get at least 100 gigabytes of storage space on the Adobe servers. But even now, because Adobe keeps pushing users to save documents to the Adobe Cloud, it can become an issue. ![]() But how much do you get and how much space do you have left? And if you're running out, can you upgrade to get more space? It was more critical in the early days before the advent of cheap, huge cloud storage like from Dropbox and Google Drive and SharePoint. ![]() You likely know that you get a certain number of gigabytes, maybe you don't know, of storage on Adobe servers with your subscription to the Creative Cloud. Today I want to talk about storage, specifically Creative Cloud storage. This is Anne-Marie for InDesign Tips for Design Geeks.
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