Write an article based on this "Wash your hands often. Cover your mouth when coughing or sneezing. Avoid sharing personal items."
article: As with most infections, washing your hands well and often is one of the best preventative measures you can take. This goes double if you have strep throat and want to ensure that you do not spread it to those around you. Any time you cough or sneeze while battling a strep throat infection, you expel the bacteria, potentially spreading it to those around you. Make sure you take extra steps to cover your mouth whenever you cough or sneeze. Using your sleeve rather than your hands helps reduce the spread of germs even more, but if you must use your hands, ensure that you wash them immediately after. Eating utensils, cups, and anything else that goes near your mouth will have an even higher risk of potentially spreading strep throat to others. Avoid sharing these items and wash them in hot, soapy water to kill the bacteria.  After you finish two days of antibiotics, throw away and get a new toothbrush to prevent re-infecting yourself. A dishwasher works fine to eliminate the bacteria when it comes to dishes and utensils.

Write an article based on this "Choose a good spot to sleep. Wear appropriate clothing. Use leaves, pine needles or moss. Use more blankets for cold and less for warm nights. Check for bugs. Wash and air out blankets and clothes."
article: An area that is level and cleared of rocks and sticks might be a good place to lay your mat. However, if you don't have a pad and just have blankets or are without those too, finding a place beside a tree, wall or on a slab of rock would work better. These places can give you somewhere to prop your head up.  Trees provide shade and possibly even fruit, so they can be a good place to sleep. Always check the branches above you and make sure none are dead or dying so they won't fall on you while you sleep. A pine tree is an ideal place to sleep under. The old needles and twigs that have fallen over the years can be soft and very insulating. While grassy areas can seem inviting, they can encourage condensation to form overnight. If you find a cave, it can be a good place to get out of the elements but always watch out for animals. Don't wear bulky clothing before you slip into your bag. This can make the sleeping bag's ability to trap body heat less effective. Long underwear and clean socks are warm and also prevent body oils from getting on your blankets and mats.  Sweaty or damp clothing always needs to be taken off as soon as possible. You can put extra clothing outside of your sleeping bag to add more insulation if needed. Wear a beanie or other type of hat. Your head and face can get very cold since heat escapes from exposed areas. Covering these areas will go a long way to keep you warm. You can also cinch your hood to keep heat in. If you don't have any blankets or a sleeping bag, put leaves and twigs down where you will sleep. This will be softer than the ground and can slightly elevate you, keeping most bugs off of you. You can also use leaves, moss or pine needles to cover yourself, keep heat in and bugs out or as a pillow.  If you can, put a medium piece of cloth down over your bed before laying down on it. You can use a towel, sheet, sweatshirt or slip cover. You can use a washcloth, paper towels or clothes as a pillow between the rock, tree or ground that your head is laying on. Sweating can chill you so only use the amount of insulation you need to stay warm. If it's a warm night, don't zip up your sleeping bag and just tuck your feet into the bag, if needed. You can also just use a sheet or light blanket to cover yourself.  Use dry clothing and extra blankets to fill the spaces in your bag around your body so that there is less area for your body to heat. Use a water bottle full of warm water. Put it next to your body, preferably your torso. This can help generate more heat. When you choose an area, check for signs of ants and other pests before making your bed. Always shake out your bag and blankets before you go to sleep to make sure there aren't any insects, scorpions, spiders or snakes hiding in there.  If you can, elevate yourself above the ground on something to avoid being near where insects usually crawl. If you will be sleeping outside for a while, then you will want to keep your clothes and bedding clean and dry. You can rinse material in a river and leave it to dry on a branch. Every morning, allow your blankets and clothes to air out so that any moisture that collects overnight can dry out.

Write an article based on this "Select the material you are using. Select what type of cuts you are making. Press print."
article:
In the material settings, select what kind of material you are using. This will dictate the settings of the laser. For, example if you are cutting wood, the pressure will be stronger than if you were cutting foam. Click on the print menu.  A preferences menu will pop up and ask you to choose the cutting method: raster or vector. If you are cutting your image press “vector print” and if you are engraving press “raster print”. Press print and watch your image come to life. Don’t move your material while it’s being cut, otherwise, the image components won’t line up. If you want to print multiple copies of the same item, replace the cut object with a new piece of material and press print again.