Driver Sunstone V5 00 — 0 1 Whqled

Also, need to handle the ampersand in "driver’s" and convert it to the correct apostrophe. The original text has "’s" which is HTML-encoded for an apostrophe. So I need to decode that first.

Given the ambiguity, perhaps the safest approach is to process all words as per the instruction, replacing each word with three alternatives, even if they are part of a brand name. Because the user says "alter each word with 3 alternatives", and the instruction says "skip brands and names" might refer to not using specific brand names in the answers, but in this case, the user wants the text processed regardless. Driver Sunstone V5 00 0 1 Whqled

Ah, maybe "Skip brands and names" means that in the output, the user does not want any brands or names mentioned. So perhaps in the text, any brand or name should be removed, and the other words are replaced with alternatives. But the user also says to alter each word. So perhaps the brand name is considered as part of the text and each word should be replaced, but the user wants to skip (i.e., not process) brand names. Wait, but how do I know which parts are brand names? That's unclear. Maybe the user's example shows that "Driver Sunstone V5 00 0 1 Whqled" is a brand, so in the output, each word in that string should be replaced with alternatives, but the user says to skip brands and names. This is conflicting. Also, need to handle the ampersand in "driver’s"

Alternatively, maybe the user wants the entire brand name to be replaced with a single alternative. For example, "Driver Sunstone V5 00 0 1 Whqled" could be replaced with a placeholder term. But the user said to alter each word with three alternatives, so each word in the brand name string would need three alternatives. That's complex but possible. Given the ambiguity, perhaps the safest approach is

"reducing" => minimizing