Article: You don’t need any specific reason to plan a romantic date. While Valentine’s Day and your anniversary are perfect times to have a romantic date, you should have some consistency more often. You need to make time. If the two of you work or travel on weekends, plan an extravagant and romantic date for a Tuesday night.  Rent a convertible and drive around. Check local concerts and surprise her with a date night. Cook her favorite meal and have it waiting for her when she gets home during the week. Making plans to see the game with your friends doesn’t count as a date. You need to make it so that it is only the two of you. This will put all of your attention on her. Spoil your girlfriend with random gifts. You don’t have to empty your bank account to do so, but every now and then surprise her with a new sweater she saw at the mall, a pair of earrings, or a new movie for the two of you to watch. Once again, it doesn’t have to be overly expensive—it’s more about the thought behind the gift.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Be spontaneous. Make the plans solely for the two of you. Splurge on your girlfriend.
Article: During the peak of the harvest season, the fruits of some zucchini varieties can grow 3 inches (7.6 cm) or more in length per day. If you don’t check your plants for a few days, your fruits can go from finger-length darlings to foot-long behemoths before you know it! Picking zucchini fruits spurs the production of more fruits. So, if you want to end up with as many fruits as possible, use “pick early and often” as your mantra! As long as they have a deep color and firm texture, fruits this size are ready to harvest and enjoy. The seeds will be tiny and the flesh will be especially tender. Fruits this size are great for slicing and lightly sauteing, and may be tender enough to grate into salads and eat raw. When the fruits are in this length range, they are tender, sweet, and very versatile, and the seeds inside still aren’t too big. If a recipe simply calls for “zucchini,” this size of fruit will usually give you the results you’re looking for. Picking fruits at this size also will result in abundant—but not potentially excessive—production.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Check your plants every day to avoid large zucchini fruits. Pick fruits at 3 to 4 inches (7.6 to 10.2 cm) in length to maximize production. Harvest 6 to 12 in (15 to 30 cm) fruits for maximum versatility.
Article: From your desktop, click on "Start" to launch your Programs menu. Click "Run" and type in “incommand” (for Windows 95, 98, and ME) or “INCMD” (for Windows NT, 2000, and XP), without the quotation marks. This will call the command prompt by launching a black window. If your Windows operating system is newer or doesn’t have the Run option from step 1, you can find the command prompt by navigating through the Programs menu.  Click on "Start," then "All Programs." Look for the Accessories folder and open it. Click on "Command Prompt." This will call the command prompt by launching a black window. You can skip this step if you’ve already found the command prompt from step 1. In the command prompt window, type the following syntax: ping [url] [-f] [-l] [MTU value].  There’s a space in between each command. This is quite technical, but just follow the syntax. The next few steps will explain the parameters of the syntax. In the syntax from step 3, after the command “ping,” type in a URL or website address you commonly use. This is the website the command will send a ping to. For example, use www.yahoo.com or www.google.com. In the syntax from step 3, the last parameter states “MTU value.” This pertains to the test packet size in bytes that would be sent together in your ping. It’s a four-digit number. Try to start with 1500. If you use Yahoo’s website, the syntax would be as follows:  ping www.yahoo.com –f –l 1500 Press "Enter" on your keyboard to send the ping. After the ping, the results will be shown on the command prompt. If the results display “Packet needs to be fragmented but DF set,” this means the packet size isn’t optimal yet. Proceed to step 8. Reduce the packet size by 10 or 12 bytes. You’re trying to figure out the correct packet size that won’t need fragmentation. Repeat step 6 using the adjusted or reduced MTU value.  Repeat steps 6 to 9 until you don’t see a message saying that the packet still needs to be fragmented. Once you don’t see the message anymore, proceed to step 10. Once you have a packet size or MTU value that doesn’t fragment, increase this value in small increments. Try increments of 2 or 4 bytes. Send another ping using the adjusted or increased MTU value. Repeat steps 10 to 11 until you determine the largest packet size that won’t be fragmented. Take the maximum packet size you got from the ping tests and add 28 to it. These 28 bytes are reserved for the header data. The resulting value is your optimal MTU setting.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Launch the command prompt. Search for the command prompt. Set ping syntax. Set a URL. Set a test packet size. Send the ping. Read the diagnosis. Reduce the MTU value. Resend the ping. Increase MTU value. Resend the ping. Add 28 to the MTU value.