Thank you for downloading Service Pack 1 for Autodesk Robot Structural Analysis 2013 & Autodesk Robot Structural Analysis Professional 2013.
This readme contains the latest information regarding the installation and use of this update. It is strongly recommended that you read this entire document before you apply the update to your licensed copy of the product.
Contents
This update is for the following Autodesk products running on all supported operating systems.
Be sure to install the correct update for your software.
(Live Update service recognizes downloads and installs the right update automatically).
|
32-bit Products |
Update |
|
Autodesk Robot Structural Analysis 2013 |
RSA2013_X86_SP1.exe |
|
Autodesk Robot Structural Analysis Professional 2013 |
RSAPRO2013_X86_SP1.exe |
|
64-bit Products |
Update |
|
Autodesk Robot Structural Analysis 2013 |
RSA2013_X64_SP1.exe |
|
Autodesk Robot Structural Analysis Professional 2013 |
RSAPRO2013_X64_SP1.exe |
If you want to prank a friend who will laugh with you afterward, go ahead. If you’re using it to test your own email security, even better. But if you’re angry, anonymous, and about to hit send on something cruel—stop. That’s not a prank. That’s just cowardice with a keyboard. Have you used JustPranx before? Share your experience (good or bad) in the comments—but maybe use a burner email to do it. 😉
For the average person receiving a prank email, tracing it back to the sender is a dead end. The email headers will show JustPranx’s sending servers, not your friend’s home IP address. justpranx
Anonymous email feels like a cloak of invisibility, but it’s really just a paper mask. The internet has a long memory, and even “untraceable” services leave digital breadcrumbs. If you want to prank a friend who
At first glance, it looks like a relic of the early 2000s internet—a bare-bones website with a neon aesthetic and a simple promise: send anonymous emails to anyone, no sign-up required. But beneath that simple interface lies a surprisingly powerful (and controversial) tool. That’s not a prank
However, JustPranx runs on standard web hosting. If a crime is committed (harassment, swatting, threats), law enforcement can request logs from the hosting provider. Whether those logs exist depends on the provider’s retention policy. But for a casual prank? No one is coming after you. Here’s the rule I’d suggest: Never send anything via JustPranx that you wouldn’t say to someone’s face in a crowded room.
If you’ve spent any time on Reddit, Discord, or Twitter threads about “harmless trolling,” you’ve probably seen the name JustPranx pop up.
The website itself doesn’t encourage abuse—there’s no “send to 100 people” button or template library for threats. But the lack of safeguards means the burden of ethics falls entirely on the user.