INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Using a filet knife, make a straight cut on the bottom of the fish from the anal fin to the pectoral fins, stopping right before the gills. On the underside of the mouth, cut down on each side of the chin to create a V shape. Using scissors, cut from each of the pectoral fins to the trout’s adjacent gills. Grab the mouth cuts and pull back to remove the guts and gills. Though not required, you can remove the trout’s head and skin if desired. To do so, use your scissors to cut off each of the fins. After, pull the head back slowly to remove the skin. Clip the tail, then quickly rinse the fish to wash off any blood. To make sure your fish grills evenly and thoroughly, make sure it is at room temperature before cooking. Do not grill cold or frozen trout, doing so will leave parts of your fish undercooked.

SUMMARY: Remove the trout’s gills and guts. Let your trout thaw until it is at room temperature.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Fixed expenses may be fixed, but that does not mean you can't replace them with lower fixed expenses. Take a look at each type of fixed expense and examine if there any ways to reduce them.  For example, your cell phone bill may be fixed every month, but is it possible to drop down to a plan with lower data to save money? Similarly, your rent may also be fixed, but if your rent takes up more than half of your income, you should examine perhaps downgrading from a two bedroom to a one bedroom apartment if possible, or relocating to a more affordable area.   If you have car insurance, be sure to contact your broker each year to see if there are better deals available, or alternatively, continually shop around for better deals. If you have high levels of expensive credit card debt, consider a debt consolidation loan to reduce your fixed interest expense each month. This will allow you to pay off your credit card debt with a lower interest rate consolidation loan. This is where most savings can be found. Take a close look at your expenses each month and see where your spending that is not towards fixed expenses goes. Look at small expenses that add up over time like coffee purchases, eating out, grocery bills, gasoline, or leisure purchases.  When looking to reduce these expenses, think about what you want, versus what you need. Look to cut out as many wants as possible. For example, you may need to have lunch every day at work, but purchasing lunch at the cafeteria is a want. You could select the more affordable option of making a lunch each day. The key is to look at variable expense areas that take up a large portion of your budget. Is most of your extra spending on gasoline, food, entertainment, or impulse purchases? You could target reductions in those areas by using more public transport, packing more lunches for work, opting for more affordable entertainment choices, or leaving your credit card at home to reduce impulse spending, for example. Do an online search to find innovative ways to reduce your variable expenses in areas you struggle with. If you have identified a few areas to reduce your spending, subtract that amount from your expenses. You can then subtract the new expense amount from your monthly income to determine how much you have left over. Assume monthly income is $2,000, and your expenses were $1,600. After looking for expense reductions, you may have managed to find $200 in savings each month, bringing your monthly expenses down to $1,400. You now have $600 left over each month.

SUMMARY: Look to reduce your fixed expenses. Look to reduce your variable expenses. Calculate how much money you have leftover after making reductions.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Click the Windows logo in the bottom-left corner of the screen. Click the gear-shaped icon in the lower-left side of the Start window. It's a computer monitor-shaped icon in the Settings window. You'll find this in the upper-left side of the window. It's at the bottom of the page. You'll find this box just below the "Multiple displays" heading. A drop-down menu will appear. In the drop-down menu, click one of the following options depending on your preferences:   Extend these displays (recommended) — Uses the second monitor as an extension of your first monitor.  Duplicate these displays — Displays the first monitor's contents on the second monitor.  Show only on 1 — Shows content only on the first monitor.  Show only on 2 — Shows content only on the second monitor. It's below the drop-down box. Doing so will apply your display settings. If you chose to extend your desktop, you'll now see your desktop split between the first monitor and the second monitor.

SUMMARY: Open Start . Open Settings . Click System. Click the Display tab. Scroll down to the "Multiple displays" section. Click the "Multiple displays" drop-down box. Select a display option. Click Apply. Click Keep settings when prompted.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Type/Copy/Paste: cd /home/"your_user_name"/Downloads  Type/Copy/Paste: sudo cp -r jdk-7u40-linux-i586.tar.gz   /usr/local/java  Type/Copy/Paste: sudo cp -r jre-7u40-linux-i586.tar.gz /usr/local/java  Type/Copy/Paste: cd /usr/local/java Type/Copy/Paste: sudo tar xvzf jdk-7u40-linux-i586.tar.gz  Type/Copy/Paste: sudo tar xvzf jre-7u40-linux-i586.tar.gz

SUMMARY:
Become root user and copy the new compressed Oracle Java binaries from our download directory to /usr/local/java  Next we are going to unpack our new version of Oracle Java binaries, in the directory /usr/local/java