"Advanced security features for data protection": - Advanced: Improved - security: safety - features: features - for: to ensure - data: data - protection: securing
Now, moving on to the next sections. Let's handle "Advanced Features" as is. The list under it:
"Advanced connectivity options": "Advanced" could be innovative. "Connectivity options" can be network choices. Weierwei Vev-3288s Manual
So the approach is: for each word in the text that's not a proper noun, replace it with three alternatives. But how to determine what's a proper noun? The user provided specific examples like "Weierwei Vev-3288s" as a proper noun. But other technical terms like "Wi-Fi" might not be considered proper nouns here. So perhaps the user wants to leave all proper nouns as is, including brand names, product names, specific hardware components, etc. So "Wi-Fi" is a proper noun? Hmm, in some contexts, it's a proper noun, but maybe in this case, since it's a technical spec, it's considered part of the list and should be left. Or maybe not. The user says "skip proper nouns," which usually refers to names of specific entities like brands, products, people, places, etc. So "Weierwei Vev-3288s" is a proper noun. "Wi-Fi" is a registered trademark, so that's a proper noun as well. So I should leave those as is. Similarly, "Intel Core i5" is a product name, so proper noun.
"User-friendly interface": "User-friendly" becomes operator-friendly. "Interface" could be console. "Connectivity options" can be network choices
Processing each sentence:
So proceeding step by step:
Now the "Maintenance and Repair" section.