Unfortunately they're not backing down from the "cloud-only" policy. At least not yet anyway.
Perpetual license owners of recent creative suite generations -such as CS5, CS5.5 and CS6 who are running those suites on fairly recently purchased computing hardware have all the leverage they need to wait Adobe out.
Creative Cloud subscriptions might have their place. But, IMHO, it's flat out short-sighted for Adobe to make it the only purchasing option. I think they need to continue releasing perpetual licensed versions of all their applications (even the new "edge" based web apps). Not only that, but they need get rid of that stupid one version back upgrade policy they adopted last year. That did more to anger me than their move to go "cloud only." The 1 version back upgrade policy effectively forces any registered user to buy every upgrade, no matter how lame or bad it may be, just to maintain upgrade eligibility.
If Adobe's CEO wants some ideas on how to improve sales and creative cloud subscription levels he might want to try a few things.
1. lower the subscription price of Creative Cloud from $50 per month down to $30 per month. Or create different subscription tiers similar to how the boxed suites were organized (Master Collection, Design Premium, Web Premium, etc.).
2. continue selling perpetual licenses of the software. Get rid of that arrogant 1 version back only upgrade policy. Make it at least 2 versions back for upgrade eligibility. Lower the price penalty of skipping a version upgrade. Adobe needs a "carrot" of incentive to make every upgrade worth buying. Packaging a collection of bug fixes and cake icing features doesn't work as a full version upgrade. Adobe has been doing plenty of that in recent years.