A player cannot receive an offside penalty for receiving the ball directly from a throw-in, a corner kick, or a goal kick. In these situations the ball has left play and reset all offside statuses. When the defending team takes control of the ball, the offside status of the attackers gets reset. Any attackers who were offside for the last play are now free to interfere with the play without penalty. However, there are some edge cases where it may be unclear whether this has happened. The ref always makes the final call, but these are the general guidelines:  If a defender accidentally deflects the ball or it rebounds off her, there is no offside reset. This includes an instinctive reaction to deflect the ball, although this can be a tough ref call. If the defender makes a save to prevent a goal, there is no offside reset. (This prevents offside players from gaining an advantage by waiting at the goal.) The defender must gain control of the ball before the offside player can interfere. (This can be subjective, but the offside player is usually safe if approaching from some distance away.) If a defender runs off the edge of the field due to his own momentum, he still counts as a defender when working out onside and offside positions. An offside player who does not approach the ball can still receive a penalty if she blocks the vision of a defender in a way that impairs her play. Since a rules tweak in 2013, this is the only way an offside player can receive a penalty without coming into contact with a defender or the ball. Gestures and shouting do not violate offside rules, though they may receive a penalty for unsporting conduct.
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One-sentence summary -- Know the situations where an offside penalty is impossible. Understand offside resets. Take into account defenders who have run off the field. Consider offside players interfering from afar.


Go to https://www.outlook.com/ in your browser. This will open your inbox if you're logged into Outlook. If you aren't logged in, enter your email address and password when prompted. It's a tab on the left side of the page. Doing so opens your Outlook deleted emails page. If you don't see this option, click ☰ in the upper-left side of the page to prompt it to appear. Scroll through the contents of the Deleted Items folder until you find the email that you want to recover. If you can't find the deleted email but you know you deleted it within 14 days ago, you can still recover the email. If you're using the beta version of Outlook, you'll need to disable the beta before doing so. Hover over the email, then click the circle in the top-left corner of the email to select it. If you're not using the beta version of Outlook, you'll instead click the checkbox in the upper-left side of the email. It's at the top of the Outlook page, just below the "Search" bar. Doing so will place back in your inbox the selected email(s). Any restored emails will be placed back in your inbox in chronological order.
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One-sentence summary -- Open your Outlook inbox. Click Deleted Items. Find the email that you want to recover. Select the email(s). Click Restore.


Doing so should prompt a drop-down menu with screen saver options. If you've never used a screen saver on Windows 10, this bar should say "(None)". You can click any of the choices in this drop-down menu to set a Windows 10 screen saver; classic choices include the "Mystify", "3D Text", and "Photos" screen saver options. Of the default Windows 10 screen savers, only "3D Text" and "Photos" have additional options available:  3D Text - You can alter the text itself--e.g., what text is displayed--as well as its speed, the nature of its movement, and its graphical properties. You can also select "Time" to reflect your computer's clock. Photos - You can change your photos' destination folder, as well as the slide show speed and whether or not your photos display in a random order (or "shuffle"). In the field next to "Wait", you should see the number "15"; this is the default number of minutes that must pass before your screen saver becomes active. You can change this value by clicking one of the arrows (up or down) to the right of the number to increase or decrease the wait time. You can also check the "On resume, display logon screen" option to lock your computer whenever the screen saver activates. This is a good option for shared or work computers. This will save your screen saver settings! If you leave your computer alone for your selected time, your screen saver should display.
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One-sentence summary --
Click the bar beneath the "Screen Saver" text. Select a screen saver. Click "Options" to customize your screen saver. Determine when you'd like your screen saver to turn on. Click "OK" when you're done.