Write an article based on this "Open the LinkedIn webpage. Click Forgot Password?. Type in your email address or phone number. Click Submit. Click I don't have access to my email. Type in a new email address twice. Click Continue. Select your current country. Click an ID type. Click Continue. Upload pictures of your document. Allow your documents to be analyzed. Wait for a member of LinkedIn’s Trust and Safety team to contact you."
article: You should see a "New Account" creation section in the middle of the page and a login section at the top of the page. It's below the "Password" field at the top of the page. These credentials must be registered with your LinkedIn account. Doing so will send a verification message to the email account associated with your provided credentials. You have two options from this point:  If you have access to the email address in question, open it. From there, click on the email entitled "[Name], here's a link to reset your password", click the link in the email's body, and type in a new password. If you don't have access to the email address, proceed to the next step.  You'll do so in the two fields on this page. It's at the bottom of the page. To do so, click the box under "Country" and then click on your current country's name. You will have at most three options:  Passport Identity Card Driver License  This process will vary depending on the identification document you choose (e.g., passport), but you'll need to have pictures of the necessary information already on your computer.  For example, if you're using your driver's license, you'll need a clear picture of both the front and back of your license. To upload the documents, you'll click the Upload button on this page, then select your picture from its location on your computer and click OK. Do not close your browser at this time. Once your documents are approved, you will see the following message: ”Success! Thank you for completing the verification process. We successfully received your documents. A member of our Trust and Safety team will review your information and get back to you soon.” You should have access to your account within 5 business days as long as all of your identification information checks out.

Write an article based on this "Assess the cards in your hand. Go around and bid on how many points you think your team will get. Have the winner of the bid decide which suit is trump. Let the winner of the bid swap 1 of their cards with the face-down card. Pass 3 cards from your hand to the right, face down."
article: Ask yourself how many points you think you can win with the cards you were dealt. The more high cards you have, the better chance you have of winning points later on. If you have all low cards, you probably won't win very many points.  For example, if 10 out of your 14 cards are high cards (a 10 or higher), then you could assume you will probably win a lot of points this round. If all the cards in your hand are a 5 or lower, you don't stand the best chance of winning a lot of points. The person to the left of the dealer bids first. The minimum bid is 70. Once the first player bids, the player to the left of them can pass or increase the bid by 5. The bid then goes to the next player, who can pass on the bid as it stands or increase it by 5. Bidding continues until all players have passed except for 1, or if the maximum bid limit of 200 is reached. The player with the highest bid wins.  If your team ends up winning less points than what you bid, you lose those points, so be careful not to bid too high unless you’re confident you have a lot of points in your hand. If all or most of your cards are the same suit, you should try to win the bid, even if your cards are low. If you win the bid, you can make the trump suit the same as the suit you have a lot of in your hand. Since the trump suit beats everything, you'll have a good chance of winning a lot of points. The trump suit beats all other suits during the game. The special Rook card (the card with the bird on it) is always the trump suit, regardless of the suit chosen by the bid winner.  For example, the winner of the bid could declare that yellow (1 of the 4 suits) is the trump suit. If you win the bid, choose a suit you have a lot of in your hand. Since the trump suit beats all other suits, you’ll have an advantage over the other team because you have a lot of that suit. They can take the face-down card and place 1 of the cards from their hand face down on the table. If the winner of the bid doesn’t like the card they picked up, they can swap it back. If the face-down card you pick up is a high number or the same suit as the trump suit, you should probably keep it. If it's a low card that's not in the trump suit, you may want to put it back. Every player gets to pass 3 cards. When the player to your left passes you their 3 cards, pick them up and organize them in your hand. Pass your worse cards to the other player, like low cards and cards that aren't in the trump suit.

Write an article based on this "Construct the frame with the outside pieces. Use the picture on the box to orient yourself. Complete different color groups. Look at the shape of the pieces. Arrange your colored sections."
article:
Connect the edge pieces. Look for pieces that might have copyright information that you can put together in a corner of the puzzle. Start filling in the middle after you’ve assembled the frame. Consult the picture on the box as you work on the puzzle. Study the details on the box to help you make smaller sub-piles from the pieces in the larger piles of colors and like-shaped pieces you’ve sorted. Look to see where the objects you start putting together belong in the picture. Use your colored piles to complete various chunks of the puzzle. Start with pieces that are large swaths of the puzzle such as a group of blues that represent the sky. Look for pieces that will form easily identifiable objects, like houses or animals. Tabs are the parts that jut out of the pieces, and blanks are their counterpart. Find tabs and blanks that will fit together -- you’ll quickly recognize how the pieces match. Check for repeating patterns of how the tabs and blanks are put together in your puzzle. Use these patterns to speed up your assembly. Don’t try to make the pieces fit. If they don’t go together easily, it’s because they do not belong in that position. Put them approximately where they go inside the frame according to the picture on the box. Build on the sections that you’ve already completed. Fill in the gaps around the different completed sections to finish your puzzle.