Write an article based on this "Open the App Store . Tap the Search tab. Type plex into search. Tap GET next to Plex. Enter your Touch ID or passcode. Tap OPEN. Tap a sign in method and log in. Tap your device menu in the top-left. Tap the device you want to stream from. Tap Browse. Tap a category. Tap Browse again. Tap the media you want to stream."
article: It's the blue app with a white "A" on it. This is where you download and install new apps. It's located in the lower-right corner next to the icon of an hourglass. Tap the gray search bar at the top and type plex on the on-screen keyboard that pops up. Then tap the search key to perform a search. The Plex app has a black icon with a yellow chevron pointing towards the right. When prompted, use your Touch ID or device passcode to download and install the Plex app. If you don't have any security on your phone, tap "Install" to start the installation. This will appear once the app is installed. This will launch the Plex app. If you already have a Plex account, choose whichever method you used to create your Plex account when you installed the media server on your computer. If this is the first time using Plex on your iPhone or iPad, you can tap "Next" to view the introduction or you can tap "Skip Intro" to go the main page. It's located in the upper-left corner and has the name of your iPhone or iPad. If you want to view videos on your computer, tap your computer's name or the name you gave to the Plex Server you set up on your computer. It's the second tab at the bottom. You can choose Movies, Music, Photos, Channels, or Playlists. This will allow you to browse all the files and folders in your media library. This media will start streaming to your iPhone or iPad.

Write an article based on this "Understand the object of the game. Decide who will go first. Take your turn. Follow the instructions when you draw a Chance or Empire card. Bid on spaces that other players do not want. Use the sneaky swapper option on the dice. Keep playing until someone wins."
article: In Monopoly Empire, the first player to fill up his or her billboard with brand billboards wins the game. Therefore, you want to buy as many brand billboards as quickly as you can to fill up the spaces in your board. When other players land on billboard spaces that you own, they will have to pay you the amount of money you’re your billboard height reaches on your tower. If a player runs out of money, they do not go bankrupt as in regular Monopoly. That player simply takes the top billboard piece from his or her tower and gives it to the player who requires it. Before you start the game, decide who will go first. The official rules for Monopoly Empire state that the youngest player gets to go first. If you prefer, you can also determine who goes first by rolling the dice and seeing who gets the largest number. Follow a clockwise pattern for turns. When it is your turn to play, you will need to complete a specific set of actions. Perform these actions on every turn in the same order. Your turn will be a little different every time based on the space you land on. During your turn, perform each of the following actions:  Roll the dice. Take two turns if you roll a double. For example, if you roll two sixes, then move 12 spaces and perform an action for that space. But then, roll again and move again and perform another action. Move your token the number of spaces you rolled. For example, if you roll a 10, then move 10 spaces Perform an action for the space you land on. For example, if you land on a billboard tile that is available for purchase, then you can purchase it. Whenever you land on a Chance or Empire card space, you will get to draw one of these cards. In general, you will need to use Chance cards right away, but you can save Empire cards until you want or need to use them. For example, if you get a “Get Out of Jail Free” card, then you can hang onto it until you need it. Please note, there is no limit to the amount of Empire cards that can be played during a turn. For example, if someone plays a "Just Say No" card, the other opponent could also play a "Just Say No" card should they have one in their hand. If you happen to land on a billboard that you do not want to buy, then that tile will be up for auction. The banker is in charge of managing the auction and the bidding starts at $50. All follow-up bids must be in increments of $50, such as $100, $150, $200, $250, etc. The highest bidder gets the billboard and must pay the amount that he or she bid to the bank. If you roll the handshake icon on one of your dice rolls, then you can perform a sneaky swap as one of your turn actions. This means that you can exchange two topmost billboard tower tiles. For example, you can exchange your topmost billboard tile with another player’s topmost billboard tile, or you can swap the tiles of two other players. Using the sneaky swap is optional. If you do not want to use it, just move your piece the number of spaces that that you rolled on the other die. If you do use the sneaky swap, then do not move this turn. The player who fills his or her tower first wins the game. Keep playing until someone does so. Monopoly Empire takes about 90 minutes to play, but it may take longer for someone to win the game.

Write an article based on this "Start with the basics. Move outward. Gather unusual sources. Review and trim."
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That means just going out and researching. If you spend time creating a close outline of your presentation paper, you're most likely wasting that time, as the research you gather might not fit neatly into every slot. Instead, start with your school's library (or the local public library). Spend time collecting stacks of books and skimming them for valuable information until you've exhausted those resources. Keep an open notebook or a portable device with a notepad on hand, and copy down everything you might use verbatim.  It's generally considered more convincing to source one item from three different authors who all agree on it than it is to rely too heavily on one book. Go for quantity at least as much as quality. Be sure to check citations, endnotes, and bibliographies to get more potential sources (and see whether or not all your authors are just quoting the same, older author). Writing down your sources and any other relevant details (such as context) around your pieces of information right now will save you lots of trouble in the future. Once you have good information from your local resources, use whatever tools you have access to gather more from online databases such as JSTOR. If you're a college student, chances are you've got free access to many of these resources through your school; if not, you might have to pay to subscribe to some of them. This is also the time to do general online research, at sites with reputable information such as government agencies or respected nonprofit organizations. Use many different queries to get the database results you want. If one phrasing or a particular set of words doesn't yield useful results, try rephrasing it or using synonymous terms. Online academic databases tend to be dumber than the sum of their parts, so you'll have to use tangentially related terms and inventive language to get all the results you want. By now, you should have more information written down (and properly sourced) than you can possibly use in one paper. This is the time to get creative and really breathe life into your project. Visit museums and historical societies for records that can't be reviewed anywhere else. Speak to respected professors for academic information you can use as a primary source; call and speak to leaders and professionals in fields related to your topic.  If it's sensible, consider heading out into the field and speaking to ordinary people for their opinions. This isn't always appropriate (or welcomed) in a research project, but in some cases, it can provide you with some excellent perspective for your research. Review cultural artifacts as well. In many areas of study, there's useful information on attitudes, hopes, and/or concerns of people in a particular time and place contained within the art, music, and writing they produced. One has only to look at the woodblock prints of the later German Expressionists, for example, to understand that they lived in a world they felt was often dark, grotesque, and hopeless. Song lyrics and poetry can likewise express strong popular attitudes. By this point, you should have a lot of research on hand, well-cataloged and at least somewhat sorted. Review all of it through the lens of your research question, looking for answers or partial answers to it. Read between the lines, as well – use context, source age, and other background information to inform your quest for understanding. With any luck, you should have more than enough to suggest and support one answer over the others. Go through all your sources one more time and set aside any that won't be directly useful to your project. From here, all that's left is to put your information into a sensible format, apply your own interpretation to it, and prepare it for presentation.