I had to remove some really strange gunk, which seemed to be a compound of adhesive & disintegrated rubber carpet underlay from a wooden floor.
The Hardware shop sold me some really nasty stuff, (maybe toluene,--can't remember) that you could only apply for 10 minutes at a time, then you had to leave the house, leaving the doors & windows open to air it out.
I struggled on with it, but it was useless----melting the "gunk", but just making it bond harder to the floor.
I eventually tried using "Mineral Turpentine" which didn't melt the stuff, but penetrated between it & the wood, allowing it to be removed with a spatula.
The Turps really stunk, but it isn't near as toxic as the original stuff I tried.
Much more recently, I had occasion to remove a bunch of defunct nicads from a battery pack belonging to a handheld ham radio.
They were held in place with the yellow crud.
Having had a bad experience trying to remove this stuff before, I decided to try Turps, so using a 500g Coffee can, I dropped the assembly inside, poured in enough of the stinky stuff to cover it, & left things for several weeks.
On removal, the nicads could be relatively easily extracted from the clutches of the glue, & enough of the latter removed from the case to allow it to be re-loaded with new cells, although I haven't got round to that, instead just "bodging" two 9v alkalines in parallel, to allow me to use the radio.
I don't know what adverse effects Mineral Turpentine would have on more fragile electronics, nor do I know what it is called in other countries.
All in all, the method decided upon in the link posted by Bravo might be the best bet, as freezing seems a bit gentler.