Summarize the following:
You can find lots of free Steam skins online. One popular download site is https://steamskins.org. Skins are usually compressed into .Zip or .Rar archives. Depending on your browser, you may have to select a download location. Select the Downloads folder and click Save. You may have to open the Downloads folder if it’s not already open. A context menu will appear.  This is usuallyC:/Program Files (x86)/Steam/skins. If you installed Steam in a different directory, click the Browse… button and select the “skins” folder in that directory now. The files will extract to the skins folder. You’ll usually find it under All Apps in the Start menu. If prompted to log in or input a Steam Guard code, follow the on-screen instructions to do so. It’s at the top-left corner of Steam. It’s near the bottom of the menu. It’s in the left column. ” It’s near the center of the right panel. All skins you’ve extracted to the skins folder will appear in this drop-down menu. A confirmation message will appear at the center of the screen, asking you to restart the app. The applications will shut down and restart with the new skin applied.

summary: Find skins to download. Download the skin to your computer. Right-click the file you downloaded. Click Extract all…. Select the Steam skins folder. Click Extract. Open Steam. Click the Steam menu. Click Settings. Click Interface. Click the down-arrow next to “default skin. Select your new skin. Click OK. Click RESTART STEAM.


Summarize the following:
Place a metal fork on your cutting board with the tines facing up. Hold the handle of the fork with your non-dominant hand so it does not move. Use a fork with smaller tines for smaller pieces of ginger. Hold the ginger with your dominant hand. Keep constant and even pressure on the ginger as you drag it across the edge of the fork. You’ll see strands of minced ginger falling from the knob you are grating. This helps you work around the interior fibers and frees up the most amount of usable ginger. Continue grating the ginger on the tines of the fork until you have the amount that you need for your recipe.

summary: Lay a fork down on the cutting board. Rub peeled ginger across the tines of the fork. Pull the ginger in all directions.


Summarize the following:
If a chicken is crying loudly and repeatedly, it means it has been captured and is being taken away. The chicken is alerting the others in the area to beware and saying “Let go!”  If you are the one carrying the chicken away, be careful because the distress squawk might embolden other chickens or the rooster to attack you to save their friend. Be prepared to protect yourself if necessary. Sometimes a chicken will let out just one loud distress squawk, which usually means it’s been startled or unexpectedly pecked by another chicken. Check on baby chicks making distress calls. If you hear a baby chick make a loud, sharp tweet, it means that it is in distress. Check to see if it is too hot, cold, or hungry. Any of the chickens who sense danger in some way will raise an alarm. They will make a loud, repetitive cackling noise that sounds like “kuh-kuh-kuh-KACK!”. The other chickens will then seek shelter. If you hear the alarm cackle, be sure to check on the chickens to make sure there isn’t a predator after them. If your rooster is making loud squawks while looking at the sky, he is letting the others know that there is a raptor or other dangerous predator in the sky above them. Be sure to check on your flock if you hear this sound.  If the rooster raises too many false air raid alarms, the chickens will start ignoring the signal. Sometimes the rooster will make a slightly softer “chirrup” sound as it looks at the sky. He is indicating that there is something in the sky, but it is probably not dangerous. Hens will make a soft “errrr” sound to alert their chicks to danger. You can mimic this sound to achieve the same result. Be sure to keep your voice soft and vibrate the sound like you are humming with your lips open and your teeth closed. When the chicks hear the sound, they will run for cover under their mom’s feathers or flatten themselves against the ground to hide.
summary: Recognize the distress squawk. Check on your flock if you hear an alarm cackle. Listen for the rooster sounding the air raid alarm. Use the hen’s hushing sound to get chicks to run for cover.