Problem: Article: Put a manageable amount of information in each spot. Don’t put too much information in any one place or it will be overwhelming for your brain to try to remember it all. If certain things must be kept separate from others, put them in distinctly different places.  If necessary, place things along your route in the order in which you need to remember them. If your palace is your house, and you are trying to remember a speech, you might place the first few sentences on your doormat and the next few in the keyhole of your door. Put your best friend's address in the mailbox outside or on an envelope on the kitchen table. Put their phone number on the couch where you always take their phone calls. If you're trying to remember U.S. presidents in order, make the washing machine George Washington. Walk further into the laundry room and find a pair of long johns, which represent John Adams. You don’t need to put a whole string of words or numbers in a given location to be able to remember it. All you need to store in each spot is something that will jog your memory and lead you to the actual idea you’re trying to remember. For example, if you’re trying to remember a ship, picture an anchor on your couch. If the ship is the U.S.S. Wisconsin, picture the anchor made out of cheese.  Symbols are shorthand and more effective than picturing the actual thing you are trying to remember. The images you put in your palace should be as memorable as possible. Generally, images will be more memorable if they are out of the ordinary or attached to some strong emotion or personal experience. You might picture your mom placing her Social Security number on the kitchen table or an adorable puppy eating from a bowl that has your vocabulary test words on it.  Another example uses the number 124, which isn’t memorable. But an image of a spear shaped like the number 1 going through a swan (which looks like the number 2) and splitting the swan into 4 pieces is. It’s disturbing, but that’s what makes it stick in your mind. You don't have to use only positive images. Negative emotions or images, like including a politician you hate, are just as strong. Create a simple mnemonic by forming an acronym using the first letters of the words in a phrase or make a little rhyme containing the information you’re trying to remember. Then insert these new shortened pieces of data into your memory palace instead of the longer piece.  For instance, say you need to recall the order of notes on the lines of the treble clef (EGBDF). Imagine a little boy eating a piece of chocolate fudge, which would evoke the first-letter mnemonic “Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge." A rhyming mnemonic is, “In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue.” Envision Columbus holding a blue sailboat toy in your living room.
Summary: Place important information in small chunks around the palace. Use simple images to symbolize complicated phrases or numbers. Add people, emotional triggers, or bizarre images to remember data. Incorporate other mnemonics to recall longer strings of information.

Problem: Article: Tap the WordPress app icon, which resembles the WordPress "W" logo. This will open your WordPress dashboard if you're logged in. If you aren't logged in, enter your email address and password to continue. On iPhone it's in the bottom-left corner of the screen and on Android it's on the top-left of the screen. Doing so will bring up your main WordPress blog's dashboard. If you have more than one blog under the same email address, tap Switch Site in the top-left corner of the screen, then tap the name of the blog that you want to delete. You'll find it in the "PUBLISH" section. It's below the bottom-right corner of the post. Skip this step on Android. This is below the post. Doing so deletes the post from your WordPress site. On Android, tap DELETE when prompted.
Summary: Open WordPress. Tap the WordPress icon. Make sure that you're on the correct blog. Tap Blog Posts. Tap More. Tap Trash. Tap Move to Trash when prompted.

Problem: Article: Click the Windows logo in the bottom-left corner of the screen. The Start menu will pop up. Click the gear-shaped Settings icon in the lower-left side of the Start menu. Doing so opens the Settings window. It's in the bottom row of Settings options. This tab is in the upper-left side of the window. It's the first option below the "Protection areas" heading near the top of the page. Doing so opens the Windows Defender window. You'll find this option in the middle of the page. Click the blue "On" switch {"smallUrl":"https:\/\/www.wikihow.com\/images\/0\/0a\/Windows10switchon.png","bigUrl":"\/images\/thumb\/0\/0a\/Windows10switchon.png\/57px-Windows10switchon.png","smallWidth":460,"smallHeight":218,"bigWidth":"57","bigHeight":"27","licensing":"<div class=\"mw-parser-output\"><p>License: <a rel=\"nofollow\" class=\"external text\" href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Public_domain\">Public Domain<\/a><br>\n<\/p><\/div>"} below the "Real-time protection" heading, then click Yes when prompted. This will turn off the real-time scanning feature of Windows Defender.  You can also disable Windows Defender's cloud-based protection by clicking the blue "On" switch below the "Cloud-delivered protection" heading and then clicking Yes when prompted. Windows Defender will turn itself back on the next time you restart your computer.
Summary:
Open Start . Open Settings . Click  Update & Security. Click Windows Security. Click Virus & threat protection. Click Virus & threat protection settings. Disable Windows Defender's real-time scanning.