Open your web browser, type in www.yahoo.com on the address bar, and hit "Enter."  Click on the Mail icon on the upper-right side of the screen and log in with your e-mail address and password. Alternatively, you can head to http://mail.yahoo.com. You won’t need to click any Mail icon; just enter your login details and click "Sign In." Once you’re logged in, go to your inbox by clicking on it on the left menu panel of the window. Web e-mail providers basically have a common layout, with the menu panel on the left pane. Once you’re inside the inbox, click on the message with the attachment you want to save. Messages with attachments have the paper clip icon beside it. On the current interface of Yahoo mail, go to the body of the e-mail message and scroll down. All files attached to a message are listed at the bottom of the body. For images, click the Down arrow on the lower right corner of the thumbnail to download it. Wait for the file to finish downloading. Double-click on the file to open it.
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One-sentence summary -- Log into your e-mail account. Go to your inbox. Open the message with the attachment you want to save. Scroll down the message. Click the Download link beside the name of the file. Go to your computer’s Download folder to see the saved attachment.


There are dozens of varieties of crepe myrtle, and each has a different growing pattern that may impact how you want to prune it. One way to narrow down the type of crepe myrtle you are growing is to look at the color of the blossoms. This alone will not tell you what type of plant you have, but it can assist you in narrowing down your search.  Popular varieties of crepe myrtle include Catawba, which has purple blooms, Osage, which has light pink blossoms, Natchez, which has white blooms, and Miami, which has bright pink flowers.  The length of the bloom may also help you figure out your variety. Some crepe myrtle plants, such as Natchez and Osage, have longer blooming periods than the average plant. Along with blossom color, the bark color of your crepe myrtle can help you figure out which variety you have. Bark may range in color from gray to brown, and may be muted or vibrant. Compare both bark and flower color to help you determine which crepe myrtle plant you are working with. Catawba has a light gray-brown bark, while Osage and Miami have a deep chestnut brown color. Natchez has cinnamon-colored bark. Crepe myrtles can grow in number of ways, and the nature of their growth will impact you you trim them. Some varieties grow like small trees, while others as small, compact shrubs, and others still grow as broad, spreading shrubs. Look at how your crepe myrtle grows to determine how you want to prune it. Catawba grow as a small shrub where Osage grows as a large shrub or small tree. Both Miami and Natchez grow as trees, though Natchez varieties tend to arch where Miami varieties grow upright.
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One-sentence summary -- Look at the flower color. Check the bark color. Evaluate the growing pattern.


Click on the “Edit” button to the right of the option if you want to be notified by email and/or text message/push notification when someone tries to log into your Facebook using a computer or mobile device you have never used before. Mark the appropriate box with a check. Click on the “Edit” button for Login Approvals, and tick the box that appears if you want your account to require a security code when it is accessed from unknown browsers. Click on the “Edit” button for Code Generator if you want to enable and set up another way to get security codes. Leave unchecked if you want to disable Code Generator. This option defaults at “Code Generator is enabled.” Click on the “Edit” button for App Passwords if you want to generate and use special passwords to log into your apps instead of using your Facebook password or Login Approval codes. Click on the “Edit” button for Trusted Contacts if you want to add friends who can securely help you if you ever have trouble accessing your account. The window will then expand to display a clickable “Choose Trusted Contacts” tab so you can add up to five friends to this privileged list. Click on the “Edit” button for Trusted Browsers to review browsers you saved as the ones you often use. When you log into your account using a browser that is not on your Trusted Browsers list, you will be notified. You can remove browsers you don’t want to use on this page too. Click on the “Edit” button to Where You’re Logged In to review and manage the places where you are logged into Facebook. Should you notice any unfamiliar devices or locations, click on “End Activity” to end the session.
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One-sentence summary -- Edit your login notifications. Impose a security code using Login Approvals. Use your Facebook app to get security codes using Code Generator. Set special passwords using App Passwords. Choose 3–5 friends to be your Trusted Contacts. Set your Trusted Browsers. Review your login locations via Where You’re Logged In.


The easiest way to identify your range is with the assistance of a tuned instrument that you can play while you sing, like a piano or keyboard. If you do not have access to the physical instrument, download a piano app, such as Virtual Piano, on your smartphone, tablet, or other device as a substitute. Using an online piano on your laptop or device will give you access to a full simulated keyboard. It will also make it much easier to figure out which notes are your highest and lowest because the app will actually indicate the correct scientific pitch notation for a key as you play it. Start by figuring out what the bottom end of your natural range is by locating the lowest note that you can sing comfortably without your voice croaking or cracking. You should also not have to “breathe” the note; that is, its tone quality should match that of the rest of your chest voice and not have a breathy or scratchy sound.  Instead of trying to pull your lowest note out of thin air, start by singing a higher note on a consistent vowel sound (like “ah” or “ee” or “oo”) and work your way down the scale into your lowest registers. If you’re a woman, start with an easy C4 (middle C on the piano), and work your way down the keys, matching each note until you hit your lowest. If you’re a man, play a C3 on the piano, and go down one key at a time from there. The goal is to find the lowest note you can still sing comfortably, so do not count notes that you cannot sustain. Once you know how far down your voice can reach comfortably, try to go a bit lower, key by key and note by note. Breathy notes that you can sustain count here, but croaky notes that you cannot hold do not. For some singers their normal and breathy lowest notes may coincide. For others, they might not. Once you have found your lowest normal-voiced note and the lowest one you can reach, write them down. Do so by identifying the piano key that corresponds to the note and then figuring out its correct scientific pitch notation. For example, if the lowest note you can hit as you descend the scale is the second-to-last E on the keyboard, then you’d write down E2.
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One-sentence summary --
Locate a piano-like instrument. Find the lowest note you can sing in your normal (modal) voice. Sing the lowest note you can, including breathing. Record your lowest notes.