Disabling network cards.

Ironically, I was briefly barred from using my own software because I had disabled a network interface on my PC and forgot about it before running the software.

I read on these forums that it isn't necessary to disable network interfaces, though I'm not sure how you know that.

Obviously, my reason for disabling a network interface was to stop Windows from using it, because the ADSL connection behind it was having intermittent problems that day. Disabling this interface forced Windows to switch to a temporary connection that was working smoothly.

If we aren't supposed to get this effect by temporarily disabling networking connections, what should I tell myself and my clients is the correct way to do this?

And, do I understand that v4 will work around this issue? How?

>> "And, do I understand that v4 will work around this issue? How?"

We can't get into the technology we use to workaround this issue (because it's proprietary, and we have a handful of competitors who literally copy us verbatim), but yes we do solve this issue with TurboActivate 4.0.