Summarize the following:
Go to https://www.sketchup.com/ in your computer's web browser. In order to use SketchUp, you'll have to answer a few questions and create an account on the website. It's a red button on the right side of the page. This option is in the middle of the form. It's a link above the login button. Doing so will take you to the account creation page. Fill out the following text fields:   First name — Enter your first name.  Last name — Enter your last name.  Email address — Enter a working email address to which you currently have access.  Password — Enter a password for your account. In the "Enter the above text" box, type in the text from the box above it. You can change the text by clicking the "Refresh" button to the right of it. It's a yellow button at the bottom of the page. Doing so creates your account and sends an activation email to the email address you listed. Open the email inbox for the address you used to create your account, then do the following:  Look for a "Trimble Account Creation Notification" email (you may have to check the Spam folder, or look in one of your inbox's other folders). Open the "Trimble Account Creation Notification" email from the "noreply_identity" sender. Click Activate account in the email's body. Click the here link on the redirect page, then enter your email address and password and click Sign in. It's near the top of the page. If you don't see this link, just go to https://www.sketchup.com/products/sketchup-free in your computer's web browser. It's a red button at the top of the page. Doing so will open SketchUp in your web browser, from which point you can begin using it as you please.

summary: Open the SketchUp website. Click Get SketchUp. Click Personal Projects. Click create a Trimble ID. Enter your account information. Check the "I'm not a robot" box or enter the captcha text. Click Create new account. Activate your account. Log into your Trimble account. Click the SketchUp for Web link. Click Start Modeling.


Summarize the following:
For in-text citations, always include the last name of the author or authors and the year of publication. Use the author’s name at the beginning of the sentence to introduce the author (“Roberts (1982) wrote that…”) or at the end of the sentence as an in-text citation (“The sky is blue (Roberts 1982).”).  Include a page number when you are directly quoting from somewhere else and when you are paraphrasing. Whether at the end or beginning, the page number follows the date with just a colon in between and no spaces: “Roberts (1982:171) wrote that ‘The sky is blue.’” or “’They sky is blue’ (Roberts 1982:171).” For the end of the paper, begin a reference with the last name of the author, followed by the first names or initials and a period, like “Roberts, Grace D.”  Next, add the date: “Roberts, Grace D. 1982.” Follow it with the title of the book. Use title-case capitalization and italics: “Roberts, Grace D. 1982. All the Colors of the Rainbow.” Finally, use the place of publication and the publisher, separated by a colon and a space: “Roberts, Grace D. 1982. All the Colors of the Rainbow. Grandbury, Oklahoma: Books for Nerds Press.” For a journal article, follow a similar format to the book example. Begin with the author’s name, last name first: “Grace, Roger.” Follow it with a period.  Next, add the year: “Grace, Roger. 1999.” Also use a period here. Now, add the journal article’s name in quotations with a period. Use title-case capitalization (capitalize important words): “Grace, Roger, 1999. ‘Green Is the Best Color.’” Follow that with the journal’s name in italics, also in title-case: “Grace, Roger, 1999. ‘Green Is the Best Color.’ RoyGBiv Journal” After the journal title, place the volume number (without any punctuation) and the issue number (in parenthesis), followed by a colon: “Grace, Roger, 1999. ‘Green Is the Best Color.’ RoyGBiv Journal 57 (2):” Most of this information can be found on a database’s biographical page for the journal article or at the front of the journal (if not actually on the journal article). Finally, include the page numbers for the article: “Grace, Roger, 1999. ‘Green Is the Best Color.’ RoyGBiv Journal 57 (2):267-298.” Don’t make a space between the colon and page numbers, and end it with a period. Also, double space the page just like the rest of your paper.

summary: Understand how to do in-text citations. Learn how to do citations on the “Works Cited” page. Cite a journal article. Alphabetize your works cited page by the authors’ last names.


Summarize the following:
Tap the Skype app icon, which resembles a white "S" on a blue background. If you aren't logged into Skype, you'll need to enter your email address (or phone number) and password before continuing. It's a person-shaped icon at the top of the screen. Doing so opens a list of your contacts. This option is at the bottom of the screen. Tapping it prompts a menu to open. It's in the menu. This opens a text box. Doing so searches Skype for your specified contact. Tap the name of a contact whom you want to add. It's a blue button in the middle of the page. This option is below the text box. Doing so sends an invitation for the person to join your contacts; if they accept, you'll see them online, and you'll be able to chat with them as you please. You can first edit the invitation message by typing your preferred message into the text box that appears. If your friend doesn't already have a Skype account, you can invite them to create one and join you on Skype by doing the following:  Tap the "Contacts" icon in the bottom-right. Tap Invite People to Skype. Select a contact method (e.g., your text messaging app or Gmail). Enter your friend's contact information (e.g., their phone number or email address). Tap the Send button or icon.
summary: Open Skype. Tap the "Contacts" icon. Tap ＋. Tap Find people. Enter a name, email address, or phone number. Select a result. Tap Add to contacts. Tap Send. Invite a friend to join Skype.