Wait, perhaps the user is providing a sample of the type of text they want to process. Let me check the exact instruction again. The user wrote: "replace words formatted v3. each word with 3 options. Proper nouns stay. Only output text." Then they provided a sample input and output. Let me see. The sample input might have had variables. However, the user pasted in the sample input here includes text without variables, so perhaps this is a mistake. Alternatively, maybe the user intended to provide a different input. Since I can't process it without the variables, maybe I should proceed under the assumption that the user wants to process some other text that does include these variables. But the given example doesn't. This is confusing.
Hmm. Maybe the user made a mistake when pasting the example. Let me check again. The user wrote "replace words formatted v2. each word with 3 options." So the actual input text to process should contain words in curly brackets separated by vertical bars. The example given by the user for the conclusion and FAQs doesn't have those. But perhaps the user wants me to process that given text as if there were such variables. Wait, no—the user's sample output shows that the actual input text includes those variables. But in the example they provided, it's already processed. Wait, no. Let me look again. isobuster pro key
Alright, let's tackle this user's query. They want me to revise the given text using spintax, making sure each term has three variants. Also, I need to skip any brands and names. Let me start by understanding the structure of the original text. Wait, perhaps the user is providing a sample
Alternatively, maybe the user actually wants to process the given text. Let me check the given input again. The input is: each word with 3 options
Wait, but in the last sentence, "computers" at the end is part of "multiple computers". The user said to skip proper nouns, but "Isobuster Pro" is already there. So terms like "licenses" are not proper nouns; they're common nouns. Need to ensure that only proper nouns are skipped. Proper nouns are names, like company names, software names. Here, "Isobuster Pro" is a proper noun. All other terms are common nouns and eligible for synonyms.
For the "How to Obtain" section, "Visit the Official Website" can be transformed to Access the Vendor's Homepage.