INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Plant posts about 6 feet (1.8 m) tall adjacent to each erect plant, with a cross-bar about 3 feet (0.9 m) long, placed about 3 or 4 feet (0.9 or 1.2 m) high on the post. As the canes grow up, you you can train the primocane suckers (new growth) around the post to help support the weight of the canes, leaves, and berries.  Erect and semi-erect blackberry varieties will mostly grow straight up, sometimes quite high. To promote growth, it's important to use a post-system of trellising, as you would roses, or another snaking vine. You want to give the blackberry something to climb on. Typically, you won't need to train or trellis erect plants in the first year.  Blackberry posts don't need to be elaborate. Plant along existing fences, or use old fence posts to support blackberry. Ideally, posts will be about wrist-thick, so 2 x 2 boards would work fine. When planting trailing varieties, it's important to give them a horizontal avenue on which to cling. Plant 4–6 foot (1.2–1.8 m) high posts every 5 or 6 feet (1.5 or 1.8 m) along the row, then run two rows of fence wire between the posts, one at the top of the post and one about a foot off the ground.  It's also possible to use twine, string, or wood to connect each post to the next. Use whatever materials you have on hand to let the blackberries climb on. Ideally, trailing blackberries will spread in two rows, one higher and one lower, along each wire. With proper pruning, you can train new hardy growth along the trellis and cut back less-vigorous shoots. Keeping the plants trimmed will promote fruit growth and overall plant health, allowing water and sunlight to reach the most healthy cane. Pull weeds that grow around the blackberries and continue watering the plants weekly as the seasons change. You should see leaves and maybe some blossoms in the late spring, or you might not, depending on the climate and variety. Canes and new shoots should be significant, though you probably won't get any fruit.   In the late spring, cane should be shooting aggressively and you can practice training it out along the trellis if you want to, or support it with the post. In general, though, you shouldn't worry about cutting anything back, because you won't get any fruit, so you want to let the plant establish a solid root system.  In the winter, after your first season, you can cut cane back to about 4 feet (1.2 m) tall and 2 feet (0.6 m) wide, to let nutrients move back down to the roots. Depending on the kind of growth you got during the season, you can winter your plant accordingly. Winterizing blackberry is discussed in the following section. Unburdened shoots will put on more fruit than the same shoots in a cluster of bramble. It's to your advantage, whatever the variety, to prune the blackberry regularly.   When your plant is ready to put on fruit, take action to keep the most hardy shoots healthy by cutting back new shoots from the base of the plant. Train the most blossom-laden shoots along your trellis system, or up the post, and cut back new growth that will sap water and sunlight from the healthy shoots.  Don't be afraid to aggressively cut back blackberry. Over-burdened bramble systems won't put on as much fruit in the same amount of space as a tamed and well-pruned plant.The plant will come back just as aggressively, if not more so next year, so feel free to really hack it back. It's very difficult to kill a healthy plant by pruning aggressively.

SUMMARY: Install a post system for erect plants. Install trellis wire for trailing blackberries. Weed the ground and leave the plant alone during the first season. Prune away aggressive new canes during the second year growing season.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Find a large, flat wall with no windows and a hard floor, and decide who will start the game. Establish the parameters of the court by either marking lines or using ready made boundaries like bushes or lines on the concrete. The game starts once the first player serves the ball, or throws the ball, at the wall. Ensure that the ball must bounces once before it reaches the wall.  You may play with just 2 players or with multiple players at once. Decide the order of players to keep things organized. Depending on the size of the court and the variations of the rules, players must determine how far they are allowed to stand from the wall prior to the serve. For example, some rules indicate that everyone must stand back behind the throwing line prior to the first serve, in line with the server. Other rules state that only the thrower must stand behind the line. Do not choose a wall that you may damage or is close to items that you can damage like windows or cars. It also is ideal to find a wall where the ground has a slight decline towards the players. As a receiving player, allow the ball to bounce once after it has hit the wall and then return it. Return the ball by hitting it with your hand and letting it reach the wall directly, without bouncing on the ground. Follow your order. If you’re first, that means you're the server! Serve the ball. If your turn is second, third, or fourth, but you play the ball out of order, you are out. The ball is out when it bounces on a boundary line or outside of the boundaries completely, hits the ground before it hits the wall, bounces twice before a player is able to return it, or if a receiving player doesn’t let the ball bounce after it has hit the wall. If a receiving player fumbles the ball in an attempt to return it, she must run to the wall. Another player may then go for the ball in an attempt to throw it at the wall before the fumbling player reaches it. If the fumbling player does not touch the wall before the ball gets there, she is out of the game.  If the fumbling player touches the wall before another player can throw the ball, she is still in the game.  If the fumbling player reaches the wall first, she gets to serve again. If she is out, the next player takes her turn and serves to begin the game again. Depending on the rules, players may be eliminated in a variety of ways. Once someone is out, play is continued dependent on the rules that you and the other players have established. Common ways to continue play are:  If the thrower is out because another player catches the ball, play continues with the catcher as the new person serving the ball. If the thrower is out because she has fumbled the ball and someone has thrown her out before she has had a chance to reach the wall, play continues with the person who threw her out as the new person serving the ball. If a person who is not a thrower tries to field the ball but fumbles it, he must then try to reach the wall before someone throws him out. If he is thrown out, the same server still continues to serve. For younger or less skilled players, play continues by establishing a throwing order at the beginning of the game. This gives everyone a chance to throw.
Summary: Throw the ball against the wall. Allow the next player to receive the ball. Play until the ball is out. Throw a fumbling receiving player out. Continue the game after someone is out.

INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Set up the IP addresses and subnet mask to be with the same network Share a folder on one PC Copy files from the other PC to the shared folder

SUMMARY:
You can set up a network between 2 PCs directly without access point  You have to use a crossover ethernet cable