Article: Many personal finance magazines and blogs on travel hacks have articles that compare the frequent flyer mile programs of the major airlines. You’ll want to look for which programs give you the most miles per dollar, which ones allow you to exchange points from other affinity programs for miles, and other terms of the programs. Some rewards programs offer higher points-for-miles exchange rates than others. Others offer better selections of vacation packages. But some cards only work with a limited number of airlines. Make sure that your choice of frequent flyer program is aligned with any rewards programs you are already enrolled in. Enrolling is usually as simple as going on the website of the airline carrier, creating a frequent flyer rewards account, and agreeing to abide by the terms and conditions of the frequent flyer miles program. Some companies have prohibitions against this, but many companies, especially smaller ones, do not. If you work for a company that lets you take advantage of those miles, ask the appropriate staff person to start booking your business flights on the airline where you have your frequent flyer miles program set up. Make sure to check with a tax professional to determine any tax-related liabilities you may incur if you receive frequent flyer miles from employer-paid business travel. You’ll want to carefully look at what kinds of exchanges will get you what you want. For example, you may be able to earn an all-inclusive destination vacation package in a shorter period then it would take you to accumulate the miles necessary for airfare to the same vacation spot. Make sure you look at the rewards offered by both points and miles and assess both in terms of dollars and time spent to earn the trips you want.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Research airlines for the best frequent flyer miles programs. Assess which credit card rewards programs you're enrolled in work with which frequent flyer miles programs. Enroll in the frequent flyer programs that interest you. Check if your company will give you frequent flyer miles from business travel. Exchange miles-for-points or points-for-miles to earn the trips you want.
Article: "Who's" is the contracted form of "who is" and is suitable for use only where the non-contracted form would also be suitable. Ex. "Who's coming to dinner?" “Whose” means “of whom or of which” and is a possessive pronoun, meaning it must be used to modify another noun. Ex. “Whose car is blocking mine in the driveway?" In question form, “whose” can modify a noun that isn’t explicitly mentioned. Ex. “Have you ever heard her music?” “Whose?” “Kelly’s.”
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Use “who’s” as instructed. Use “whose” as instructed.
Article: This button is in the bottom-right corner of the Boot Camp window. Do so begins the drivers' installation process. This setup process installs drivers to help Windows 10 work with your Mac's hardware (e.g., the touch bar on newer Macs), so you may see several pop-up windows with different drivers to install. It's at the bottom of the window. This will restart your computer, thereby completing the installation process. You have successfully installed Windows 10 on your Mac. To switch between macOS and Windows 10, restart your computer and hold down the ⌥ Option key, then select your preferred operating system from the Startup Manager.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Click Next. Check the "I accept" box, then click Install. Click Install on any prompts. Click Finish when prompted.