The Pro-Edition is an extension of the iDevice Manager 11.7 to backup of iPhone and iPad files on your Windows computer and to create new unlimited ringtones from MP3 files. Together with the free iManager App is it possible to upload address book contacts, photos and videos to the iPad and iPhone. You need only a license key to change the Standard-Edition to the Pro-Edition. Buy the iDevice Manager Pro-Edition and break the chains of limitation. Do what you want and discover the internals of the iPhone und iPad!
| Standard-Edition | Features | Pro-Edition |
|---|---|---|
| 100 per day | Transfer Photos from iPhone to PC | |
| 100 per day | Transfer Videos from iPhone to PC | |
| 50 per day | Photos and images upload to iPhone * | |
| 50 per day | Video transfer to iPhone * | |
| 100 per day | Transfer of Contacts to iPhone | |
| 10 per day | File Transfer in FileSystem | |
| * Needs the free iManager App |
The year was 2022, and the streets of PLS DONATE were more crowded than a subway at rush hour. Every server was a sea of wooden stands and players spamming "Pls donate, I’m 5 Robux away from my dream item!"
Jax tried to log back in, but a new message greeted him: He looked at his empty sandwich plate and sighed. The "Op Script" had worked, alright—it had fast-tracked him straight to a week-long vacation from Roblox.
Before Jax could even reach for his mouse, his screen turned white. PLS DONATE Op Script | Auto Farm, And More! - 2022
Jax felt a rush of adrenaline. He copied the code, opened his executor, and hit Execute .
The Admin didn't say a word. They didn't need to. In the chat, a single message appeared: "Nice script, Jax. Hope it was worth the 1,000 Robux." The year was 2022, and the streets of
In the middle of this chaos lived , a player whose "Please" button was getting more wear and tear than a pair of old sneakers. He’d been standing at Stand #14 for three hours, and his total raised was still a big, fat zero.
Suddenly, Jax wasn't Jax anymore. He was a machine. His character began sprinting across the map at light speed, automatically thanking every person who walked by with a personalized message. His stand began flashing rainbow colors that weren't even in the game's original code. Before Jax could even reach for his mouse,
"There's gotta be a better way," Jax muttered. He minimized his game and started scouring the darker corners of the web. That’s when he saw it, glowing in a neon-green font on a shady forum: