Summarize the following:
It has a blue icon that says "Ps" in the middle.  Click the Photoshop icon on your computer to launch Photoshop.  You do need to purchase a subscription to download and use Photoshop.  You can purchase a subscription from https://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop.html.  If you don't have a subscription, you can click Free Trial and sign up for a free 7-day trial. You can open any .".jpeg/.jpg", ".gif", ".png", or other image files, or you can open a Photoshop (.psd) document.  Click here to open a sample picture. You can click Open on the title screen and select an image file to open or use the following steps to open an image file anytime in Photoshop:  Click File. Click Open. Select an image file or Photoshop document. Click Open. You can do this by clicking on the icon that resembles a rectangle with a dotted line, or by pressing "M" on your keyboard. You must select a section of a photo in order to edit it in Photoshop.  The Marquee tool allows you to select a rectangular region of a photo. Click and drag to select a section of an image with the Marquee tool. A selected region of an image will have a moving dotted line that resembles ants marching around the selected region.  Click and hold the Marquee icon in the toolbar to the left to display a small popup menu where you can select the variations of the Marquee tool.  The variations include the Elliptical tool, and the vertical and horizontal select tools.  The Elliptical tool allows you to select circles and ovals.  The vertical and horizontal select tools can be used to select both horizontal and vertical rows of pixels. To deselect a selection, press "Command + D" on Mac or "Control + D" on a PC. You can use the Lasso tool to draw a freeform selection around a shape or area of your image. Click the icon that resembles a lasso, or press the "L" key on the keyboard to select the lasso tool.  Click and hold the mouse button, then draw a selection around the small white sailboat that's left of center in the window. When you get to the bottom, release the mouse button—the selection will auto-complete.  Click and hold the lasso tool in the toolbar to see it's variants.  Its variants include the Polygonal Lasso tool, and the Magnetic Lasso tool. Press "Shift + L" to select the Polygonal Lasso tool. Click once anywhere on the image. Notice as you move your mouse, the starting point remains pinned, and a dashed line extends towards the cursor. Click again, and that next point becomes pinned. These pinned points are called anchor points.  You can make an entire selection by clicking to create anchor points  It can be as simple as a triangle, or as complex shape. When you reach your last click point, double-click instead of single click, and the polygon will automatically close.  You can also click the starting anchor point Press the Escape key at any time to cancel the selection in progress. Press "Shift + L" again to select the Magnetic Lasso tool.  The Magnetic Lasso tool is similar to the Polygonal Tool except it tries to guess the shape you are trying to select and automatically snaps anchor points to the edges of the shape.  Click and hold the mouse button with the cursor pointing at the waterline of the bow (front) of the boat, and drag around the boat slowly. Notice as you drag, the selection actually snaps to the boat as you move! At the top-left corner of the Photoshop window, you'll see some tool modifiers.  These include Feather, Anti-alias, Width, Contrast, and Frequency.  You can use these tools to do the following:   Feather.  This creates a soft, faded edge around your selection.  Enter a number next to "Feather" to select how many pixels wide you want the soft edge to be.  Enter "0" to turn Feather off.  Anti-alias:  Click the checkbox next to "Anti-alias" to create a smooth transition around your selection.  Width:  This sets how many pixels away from an edge the Magnetic Lasso tool will place each anchor point.  Contrast:  This sets the amount of color contrast the Magnetic Lasso tool will use to consider what is an edge and what is not.  Frequency:  This sets how often the Magnetic Lasso tool will place an anchor point while tracing an outline for a selection. Click the icon that resembles a paintbrush painting a selection in the toolbar to the left of press "W" to select the Quick Selection. Click and hold on the tan house in the middle of the picture. While holding the mouse, drag to the left or the right, "scrubbing" the house with the cursor. Notice how the selection grows as you do this. Make sure you select the roof, balcony, and all the rest of the house is selected.  If the Quick Selection tool selects too much of the image, click the icon that resembles Quick Selection tool with a minus (-) sign in the upper-left corner or press and hold the "Option" or "Alt" key.  This puts it in subtraction mode.  Click and drag slightly on the area of the selection you want to remove from the selection. Press "[" or "]" to adjust the size of the brush for the Quick Selection tool.  This adjusts the sensitivity of the tool. Click and hold the Quick Selection tool in the toolbar to view and select the Magic Wand tool.  The Magic Wand tool is similar to the Quick Selection tool, except it selects colors.  Use the field next to "Tolerance" in the upper-left corner to adjust how sensitive the Magic Wand tool is to selecting color ranges. The shapes in the upper-left corner of Photoshop can be used to add or subtract from a selection.  These options are available for all the selection tools (except the Quick Selection tool, which has it's own options).  Use the following steps to add or subtract from a selection:  Click the icon that resembles a square.  This is the default option.  Use this option to replace your current selection with a new selection using any of the selection tools. Click the icon that resembles two squares joined together.  This option allows you to use a selection tool to add to your current selection. Click the icon that resembles a square cut out of another square.  This option allows you to use any of the selection tools to subtract an area from your current selection. Click the icon that resembles two squares overlapping.  This option makes a selection where a new selection overlaps with an existing selection.

summary: Launch Photoshop. Open a document. Use the Marquee tool. Use the Lasso Tool. Use the Lasso Tool modifiers. Use the Quick Selection tool. Add or remove a part of a selection.


Summarize the following:
You can choose whatever password you want. It can be as long as you want too. Just remember to keep the quotation marks. The default will be .txt, so you’ll have to change this. If you’ve already saved the file just go to file, then save as, and then change the extension to .bat. You might need to check the box saying ‘show extension’ if you don’t see .txt. You can reach this tab from the Control Panel of your computer. Now go to Scheduled Tasks and navigate to the file that you just created. You can set it to run whenever you want it to – when someone tries to log on, when they try to open a certain file or folder, or any other prompt.
summary: Change "passwordhere" to the password of your choice. Save the file with an ending of .bat. Navigate to Performance and Maintenance.