Q: Set your oven to 350° F. Measure out 1 cup of uncooked wild rice. Pour the wild rice into a mesh strainer and rinse the seeds under cold water.  Rinsing the wild rice will remove unwanted hulls from the seeds.  1 cup uncooked wild rice will yield approximately 3 to 4 cups cooked wild rice. Pour the rinsed wild rice into a 2 quart covered glass dish. Add 3 cups cold water to the rice. Instead of water, you can use chicken, beef, or vegetable broth. Cover the dish and insert it into the oven. Bake the wild rice at 350° F for 1 hour. After 1 hour, remove the dish from the oven. Use a table fork to fluff, or stir, the rice. If the wild rice appears dry, add more water to the dish. If you used broth, add more broth instead of water. Cover the dish and return the fluffed wild rice to the oven. Bake the wild rice at 350° F for 30 minutes. After half an hour, remove the dish from the oven. Transfer the cooked wild rice to a mesh strainer to drain off any excess liquid. Pour the strained wild rice into a serving dish. Fluff the cooked seeds with a table fork and serve. After you strain the wild rice, you can season it to taste.
A: Preheat your oven. Rinse the wild rice. Combine the wild rice and water. Bake for 1 hour. Check the wild rice. Bake for 30 minutes. Strain, fluff and serve.

Q: It's free in the iPhone's App Store. To do so:  Open the {"smallUrl":"https:\/\/www.wikihow.com\/images\/5\/55\/Iphoneappstoreicon.png","bigUrl":"\/images\/thumb\/5\/55\/Iphoneappstoreicon.png\/30px-Iphoneappstoreicon.png","smallWidth":460,"smallHeight":460,"bigWidth":"30","bigHeight":"30","licensing":"<div class=\"mw-parser-output\"><p>I edited this screenshot of an iOS icon.\n<\/p><p>License: <a rel=\"nofollow\" class=\"external text\" href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Fair_use\">Fair Use<\/a><br>\n<\/p><\/div>"} App Store app. Tap Search  Tap the search bar  Type in ping  Tap Search  Tap GET next to "Ping - network utility" Enter your password when prompted. Tap OPEN next to the Ping app icon, or tap the Ping app icon on one of your iPhone's home screens. It's a green >_ on a black background. It's at the top of the screen. Type in the address for a website (e.g., "google.com") without including the "www." section. You'll find this in the top-right corner of the screen. You'll see it appearing once every second or so on the screen. The IP address will continue to appear in one-second intervals until you cancel the ping.  You can tap Stop in the top-right corner of the screen to cancel the ping. Keep in mind that you're most likely looking at the website's public IP address. You usually won't be able to see the website's private servers' IP address.
A: Download the "Ping" app. Open Ping. Tap the address bar. Enter a website's address. Tap Ping. Note the website's IP address.

Q: Most web e-mail clients have a filter option that you can use to sieve out messages. Message filters work the same way as spam filters, the only difference is that messages filters are manually set by users. You can create a filter for specific e-mail addresses in such a way that every time you receive a message from that account, it automatically gets directed to the trash bin. To create filters, simply access your account’s e-mail settings and select the “Filter” option. From there you can configure the e-mail address you want filtered out and to what location in your account should the message be diverted to (like the trash bin or a custom folder in your account). If you’re continuously receiving unwanted e-mails from personal e-mail accounts (like those annoying daily jokes you get from your cheerful office or schoolmate), then you may consider filtering them out of your inbox. In this instance, you will probably want to filter messages by the sender's email address. Have your client filter by the email of your choosing, routing all of those messages into a separate folder or even into your junk mail. If spam tends to make it through your email service's natural filters, then you might want to consider setting up your own filter which catches the most common phrases used in the spam you get. In this case, you will want to filter by the content of the subject line of the email.  Example phrases might include "Cialis", "Viagra", or "penis". Be careful not to include phrases that are sometimes good and sometimes bad. For example, you might be tired of emails about sales, but setting the word "sale" as a trigger to send a message to spam is a bad idea. Sometimes you might want to know about a particular sale. Another option is if you don't want to receive any emails with particular content. You can set your filters to browse the content section of an email for key words or phrases, and then reroute those messages elsewhere. This is handy if you're tired of being emailed about a certain hot topic issue, or if you know you'll have a lot of emails coming in about something going on. For example, let's say that you run a clothing company and you just released a new shirt for the hit show "Rainbow Unicorn Fighting Squad". You might want to create a filter that sends all emails about the shirt to a different folder, so that you can deal with those messages without losing sight of important emails in your main inbox.
A:
Consider making your own filter. Filter by sender. Filter by topic. Filter by content.