INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Rap the egg against the edge of the tumbler.  Rap softly at first, and slowly add force to your raps until the egg cracks.  Discard the shells. Add as much salt as you wish.  If you want to add finely diced peppers, onions, mushrooms, or other vegetables, add 1 handful per egg.  You could also add a handful of diced ham or spinach per egg. Remember to add no more than 1 handful of additional material (meat or vegetables) per egg, otherwise the egg-to-vegetable or egg-to-meat ratio will be thrown off. Roll the kettle around so that the oil evenly coats the bottom.  Turn on the heating element beneath the kettle and wait about 30 seconds.  Drop a droplet of water into the kettle to test its readiness.  If it is ready, the oil and water will make a loud hissing noise. If it’s not ready, repeat the test every 30 seconds until it is. Reduce heat to low or medium.  Use a long-handled wooden spoon to scrape the eggs around within the kettle.  Stop cooking when the eggs appear fluffy and begin to smell cooked.  This recipe works best if you have a wide-mouthed kettle. Scoop the eggs out of the kettle and onto a plate or into a bowl.  Top the eggs with salt, pepper, and ketchup, if you wish. Tuck an egg into a roasting bag and seal it.  If it doesn’t have an self-sealing capability, tie it off with a twist tie.  Drop the bag into the kettle and cover with water.  Boil for about 10 minutes.

SUMMARY: Crack open two or three eggs over a tumbler. Add salt, pepper, and vegetables. Pour 2 tablespoons of oil into the kettle. Pour the eggs and vegetables into the kettle and cook them. Make a boiled egg for a mess-free alternative.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: This helps create relationships with both the blogger whose blog you're interacting with and the people who follow that blog.  Make interesting, relevant comments on popular blogs. This will spark curiosity about your blog, and you may be able to pull followers. Respond to every comment someone leaves on your blog. You want the person who is responding to your entry to feel welcomed, respected and deserving of attention. This will make them more likely to talk about and share your blog with other people. Find blogs similar to yours to interact with - liked minded individuals will want to see your view on the interest you share. Respond to popular, topical articles or blog posts on your own blog. People like to see how writers interact with each other and will be interested to see how you responded to someone whose opinion they care about. Simply share an entry from one of your blogs with another one of your blogs - either by providing a link or copy and pasting, or both. This is a great way to get multiple audiences interested in your material.  If you have more than one blog, cross post entries from the blog you want to become popular to your most popular blog. The people who follow you on one may begin to follow you on the other. If you don't have more than one blog, consider creating another blog or two with different blogging programs - even if you end up just creating a replica of your original blog. There are different sets of audiences who swear by different blogging programs. You can access these different bloggers and their followers by using as many blogging programs as possible to publish your entries. This is very natural way to create interest in your blog among bloggers and non-bloggers alike.  The goal here is similar to cross blogging - get your content out on as many venues as possible. Consider using your personal social media accounts and email signatures to get people who are already connected to you connected to your blog. If people see an entry with a truly eye-catching lead, they're more likely to read it than something that seems dull or dry. Consider how headlines affect the likelihood that someone will click on a cross posted or shared link. Interesting headlines and subject lines are essential to successfully gathering interest through third parties. Does your blog look poorly put together? And have people seen it a thousand times before? Are your images relevant to your topic? Content may be king, but if you present it in a bad way people just won’t read it.  Avoid small fonts, lousy contrast, poor design and difficult to read colors – they’re all turnoffs. Looks are important; first impressions last. Make sure your blog is properly functioning. There are too many blogs with dead links, plugins that bug out, and other problems. Clear out the clutter. Less is always more. No amount of widgets or other “cool things” will keep a person interested in your blog. It may even distract them away from your writing. Direct them to your content in an interesting and streamlined way. Make sure you have a little introduction or indication of what your blog is about near the top of your blog's home page. This way people will know if your blog is relevant to what they're interested in. If you write it well enough, you may even convert people to your interests. Don't lose followers because you failed to update for a while, or changed the theme of your blog unexpectedly.  If you're finding it hard to update at least weekly, look at similar blogs to yours and find entries that created a lot of comments. Lots of comments means that this person wrote about a controversial topic and you can use your response to someone else's blog as a foundation for your own entry. If you want to post something unusual given the theme of your blog, consider mentioning that and posting it under a link instead - your followers will appreciate that you're thinking about their time and interest.
Summary: Interact with other blogs. Cross blog! Submit your posts and links to your blog on tools like forums, discovery engines, peer-sourced news feeds and social networking sites. Write great headlines and subject lines. Step back and analyze your blog as objectively as possible. Stay consistent.

INPUT ARTICLE: Article: First write out the pH equation. Next, identify the values you have by writing them directly below your equation. For example, if you know the pH is a value of 10.1, write it on the paper below the pH equation. Rearranging the equation will require a strong understanding of algebra. To calculate concentration from pH, you must understand that the inverse of log10 is "10 to the power of ..." Start by shifting the minus sign over from the log side to the pH side. Then raise 10 to the power of (each side). "10 to the power of" and log10 are inverses of each other and cancels out. For example, pH = -log10[H3O+] will mold into [H3O+] = 10-pH.  pH can then be filled in as 10.1 When working with inverse log, the calculator process is unique. Remember that log is a type of multiplication by 10. To enter your equation, key in 10. Next, hit the “EXP” exponent button. Key in the negative sign followed by the value. Hit solve. For example, take a pH value of 10.1. Key in “10” followed by “EXP.” Now key in “-/+” to have our value be negative. Finally, key in the pH of “10.1”. Hit solve. You should get about 7.943ᴇ-11, or 7.943*10-11. This means our concentration is 7.943*10-11 M. A neutral pH of 7 equates to a hydronium ion concentration of 10-7 M. A solution with a pH of 10.1 is basic, so it will have less hydronium ions than that. If we look at our answer, 7.943*10-11, we do indeed see that this number is way smaller than 10-7, so our answer does make sense.

SUMMARY:
Identify the known unknowns. Rearrange the equation. Solve the equation. Think about your answer.