Microsoft 社는 2022년 6월 15일 Internet Explorer 11의 지원을 종료했습니다.

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The main challenge is identifying which words are proper nouns. The user mentioned to keep proper nouns unchanged, but didn't specify which ones. So I have to infer that any capitalized words that are names of companies, products, software, or brands are proper nouns.

Now, generating three alternatives for each word. For this, I can use synonyms. However, for technical terms, sometimes synonyms might not exist, but the user probably wants to keep the meaning. NetMirror APK v2.3 Download -NetFlix Mirror- La...

I need to make sure I don't change any proper nouns. Let's list all the proper nouns in the text: SIGERSHADERS, V-Ray, Corona, Octane. Those must remain. Words like "Studio" or "Material" are part of the product name? The product is "SIGERSHADERS XS Material Presets Studio 6.2.0"—so "XS Material Presets Studio" is part of the name? Wait, the user wrote: "SIGERSHADERS XS Material Presets Studio 6.2.0". The product name includes "XS", "Material", "Presets", "Studio", "6.2.0"—are these proper nouns? The user said "No changes to proper nouns," but I'm not sure if "XS" or "Presets" are considered proper nouns here. Hmm. Since the user didn't specify, maybe it's safer to leave the entire product name as is. Wait, the title is "Unlock Stunning Visuals: SIGERSHADERS XS Material Presets Studio 6.2.0"—so the product name is "SIGERSHADERS XS Material Presets Studio 6.2.0". All parts after SIGERSHADERS are part of the product name? Maybe the user wants to keep the entire product name unchanged. So the words "XS", "Material", "Presets", "Studio", "6.2.0" should not be altered. But in the text, words like "Material" in the article aren't part of the proper noun unless they're part of the product name. For example, if in the article, "Material" is part of the product name, then it's a proper noun. Wait, the product is "SIGERSHADERS XS Material Presets Studio 6.2.0"—so "XS Material Presets Studio" is the product suffix. Therefore, words like "Material" in the title are part of the product name and can't be changed. But in the body of the text, "materials" is a common noun, so that can be substituted. The main challenge is identifying which words are

Wait, the user provided an example in the system requirements where "3D Rendering Engine" has four options. So maybe they want to convert that into three by combining "other supported rendering engines" as one option? Like V-Ray but the original also includes "or other supported rendering engines", which would be a fourth. Maybe the user wants all the listed ones and the "other" as separate options? But the format requires three options. Hmm. This is a bit confusing. Let me check if there are any other terms with three options. The GPU line lists two options each with "or later", so maybe that's considered two, but if "or later" is part of the option, then it's two options each with additional text. Not sure. The main one is the 3D Rendering Engine with four options. Since the instruction is to format terms with three options, maybe the user made a mistake here, but I have to work with what's given. Let's proceed. Now, generating three alternatives for each word

Starting with the first line after the code examples: "* Product Design and Manufacturing: Product designers and manufacturers utilize the software to create realistic product visualizations and prototypes." I need to check each term here. "Product Design and Manufacturing" are proper nouns, so they should stay. The next part: "Product designers and manufacturers" – "designers" already has synonyms in the example. Then "manufacturers" – perhaps "manufacturers" can be replaced with "producers" or "makers." Then "realistic" might become "accurate|authentic|convincing" and "visualizations" as before. "Prototypes" could be "mockups|mock-ups|concept models."

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