Examples of such websites are YouTube and SoundCloud.    ” Your music selection will post to your Facebook News Feed, and be shared with your Facebook friends.
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One-sentence summary -- Navigate to the website that features the music you want shared. Click on the “share” button located next to the music selection you want shared. Select the option for Facebook when asked how you want to share your selection. Enter your Facebook login information at the prompt. Type a news update to accompany the music selection if desired, and click on “Share.

Q: This technique involves some up-and-down movement, so it's easiest done standing. You should have some space to move around, so be aware of your surroundings. Make sure you - and the guitar's neck - are far enough away from your 60 inch flat screen TV or mom's favorite lamp.
A: Hold the guitar while standing up.

Article: As you'll need to use the stove to make your indicator, practice basic safety. If you're younger, ask an adult to help you before you use a stove.  Do not leave the handle of a pot pointed off the edge of the stove. You could accidentally bump into the handle, causing boiling water to fall on you. Do not use metal utensils to stir the solution. These heat up in hot water and can burn your hand. If you're using a metal pot, use oven mitts to remove it from the stove to avoid burning your hand. Iodine is safe but can be toxic if swallowed, so it should not be ingested. If you're handling iodine, it's a good idea to wear old clothes or an apron since it could stain clothing. If you do not want to make your own vitamin C indicator, you can purchase a bottle of indophenol online. This is a liquid that, like a cornstarch solution, turns colorless in the presence of vitamin C. You can buy a bottle of indophenol online, and use it as you would use a cornstarch solution.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Practice basic safety when using the stove. Be careful handling iodine. Consider purchasing indophenol.

Problem: Article: The main difference between nominal and real GDP is that real GDP takes inflation into account.  If you don't take inflation into account, you could believe that a country's GDP is increasing when really their prices are increasing. Think about it like this. If GDP of country A was $1 billion in 2012, but in 2013 it printed and then circulated $500 million, of course its GDP is going to be bigger in 2013 than it was in 2012. But this increase isn't a good reflection of the goods and services produced in country A. Real GDP effectively discounts these inflationary increases. Your base year can be a year back, five years, 10, or even 100. But you need to choose a year against which to compare the inflation. Because, at heart, real GDP is a comparison. And a comparison is only really a comparison if two or more things — years and figures — are being weighed against one another. For a simple real GDP calculation, choose the year prior to the year you're looking at. This number is also called the "deflator." If your rate of inflation from the base year to the current year is 25%, for example, you'd list that inflationary rate as 125, or 1 (100%) plus .25 (25%) times 100. For all cases of inflation, the deflator is going to be higher than 1. If, for example, the country that you're measuring actually experienced deflation, where purchasing power increased instead of decreased, the deflator would drop below 1. Say, for example, the rate of deflation was 25% from the base period to the current period. That means the currency can buy 25% more than it used to in its base period. Your deflator would be 75, or 1 (100%) minus .25 (25%) times 100. Real GDP is equal to the ratio of your nominal GDP divided by 100. As an equation, it starts off like this: Nominal GDP ÷ Real GDP = Deflator ÷ 100. So, if your current nominal GDP is $10 million, and your deflator is 125 (inflation was 25% from the base period to the current period), this is how you'd set up your equation:  $10,000,000 ÷ Real GDP = 125 ÷ 100 $10,000,000 ÷ Real GDP = 1.25 $10,000,000 = 1.25  X  Real GDP $10,000,000 ÷ 1.25 = Real GDP $8,000,000 = Real GDP
Summary: Differentiate between nominal and real GDP for a more accurate picture about how a country is doing. Choose a base year. Decide how much prices have gone up from the base year. Divide the nominal GDP by the deflator.

Article: You can choose beans that you would use for an espresso, such as an Arabica or Robusta bean. An Arabica bean will be sweeter with hints of berries and a higher acidity. The Robusta has a stronger, nuttier taste and contains more caffeine than the Arabica. Check out local coffee beans for new and different kinds of Arabica or Robusta beans. Purchase a burr grinder that grinds the beans between two abrasive surfaces. This will result in more consistent and fine grounds. If your grounds are not consistent, this may lead to some going through the filter and into your ristretto. Chances are the grinder you already have is one with a blade that’s for brewing a regular cup of coffee, so double check before you throw the beans in there. An espresso machine is necessary to make a ristretto so you’ll need to get one if you don’t already have one. Ask a friend who has an espresso machine if you can come over and make them a new type of coffee if you don’t have one. Most ristrettos are served in espresso cups, so make sure you have one handy! They’re usually about the size of a shot glass and are either glass or ceramic. Some espresso cups have handles and some don’t, so choose whichever kind appeals to you most.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Choose your coffee beans. Acquire a high quality grinder with a burr. Locate an espresso machine. Choose an espresso cup.