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Frequently Asked Questions
Satisfaction Guarantee / Order with confidence:
- 100% money back guarantee!.
- FREE lifetime US support.
- Any dongle can be removed!
- Simply the best dongle removal service on the Internet!
- All prices are in US Dollars (USD)
Q: Can any dongle be removed?
A: Yes. ANY DONGLE CAN BE REMOVED. It may take more time for some than others, but Endless Visions has never failed to do a job we were hired to do.
Q: Can your utility damage my dongle or computer in any way?
A: No. There is no way our utility can damage your dongle or computer. In all of our 17 years of programming, we have never seen software damage hardware.
Q: Will your utility work if my software supplier sends me an update?
A: We try to foresee changes but can't guarantee our tools will work for future updates. However, we will always do our best to provide excellent service to our customers. In many cases our utility will work but there is no such thing as always in the software business.
Dongle:
A dongle is a small hardware device that connects to a computer to authenticate an item of software.[1]
Dongle may also refer to something that plugs into a computer and converts a small (often proprietary) port
or plug into a larger standard plug. Dongles tend to consist of two connectors that are attached to one
another by a length of cable that that hangs (dangle) from a laptop computer. For example:
* A jack wired to a small edge connector on a Type I or II PCMCIA card, typically an 8P8C modular connector
for an Ethernet cable or RJ11 jack for a telephone cable. This type of dongle has no copy prevention purpose.
PCMCIA card dongles are notoriously fragile and unreliable. They are falling out of favour as more laptops
include built-in Ethernet and modem sockets.
* USB adapters, such as for memory cards.
* Other USB devices, primarily flash memory drives, used only for data storage (as opposed to USB Hardware
Token Devices).
* The word has also been applied to Bluetooth, Wi-Fi antennas and Infrared transceivers.
* It is also been used to refer to ATI CrossFire Interconnects
Software protection dongle:
A dongle is a small hardware device that connects to a computer to authenticate a piece of software. When
the dongle is not present, the software runs in a restricted mode or refuses to run. Dongles are used by
some proprietary vendors as a form of copy prevention or digital rights management because it is much harder
to copy the dongle than to copy the software it authenticates. Vendors of software protection dongles (and
dongle-controlled software) often use terms such as hardware key, hardware token, or security device in
their written literature. In day-to-day use however, the jargon word "dongle" is much more commonly used.
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