"Media Management" – media organization, content administration, digital asset management.
"These tools enable users to edit and enhance their photos, videos, and music files." "Enable" – allow, permit, facilitate. "Edit and enhance" – revise and improve, modify and refine, adjust and elevate. Nero 2017 Platinum 18.0.08100 Incl Serial Key 64 Bit
Next part: "Enter the serial key to activate the software." "Serial key" becomes activation code. "Activate" becomes register. Next part: "Enter the serial key to activate the software
"Disc Burning: Nero 2017 Platinum allows users to burn CDs, DVDs, and Blu-ray discs with ease." "Disc Burning" – media engraving, disc recording, disk inscription. "Allows users to burn" – enables users to record, lets users create, permits users to etch. "Allows users to burn" – enables users to
So for the first line: "RAM: 4 GB RAM (8 GB recommended)". The word "RAM" can be replaced with alternatives. But since RAM is an acronym and a standard term, maybe the user wants it to stay. Wait, but in the example given by the user, they replaced RAM with memory. Wait, but in the user's initial instruction, they said "swap each word with 3 alternatives in spintax". So maybe even if it's a standard term, they want alternatives. But the user also said "Keep names intact". So maybe in the context of this task, "names" are the software titles like Nero. Let's proceed with the example. If in the example, RAM was replaced with three alternatives, perhaps I should do the same here.
Starting with the first line: "RAM: 4 GB RAM (8 GB recommended)". The word "RAM" is a proper noun here? Wait, no. RAM is an acronym for Random Access Memory, so it's not a name. But in the context, the user said "Keep names intact," so maybe proper nouns like "Nero 2017 Platinum" should remain. However, "4 GB RAM" has RAM as a common noun. Wait, maybe the user meant to keep specific names like the product name and brand intact. Let me check the example they provided. In their sample input, "Nero 2017 Platinum 18.0.08100" is kept as is. So I should leave "Nero 2017 Platinum 18.0.08100" and the serial key XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX unchanged. The word "RAM" is part of a technical term; perhaps I should leave it as is. Wait, but in their example, they replaced "RAM" with alternatives like memory. Hmm, but the user said "Keep names intact." Maybe the example is correct. Wait, maybe "names" refer to product names and not technical terms like RAM. Let me look again. The user wrote: "Keep names intact. Only the result." So maybe "names" are things like product names, software titles, etc. So "Nero 2017 Platinum" is a name and should remain. Other terms like "RAM" are not names, so they can be replaced.