In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: There are a large number of both free and paid apps available. You can browse by category, popular, or search for specific apps. For paid apps, you will either need to purchase an iTunes card from a store, or input your payment information. To enter your credit card information, go to the Home screen and tap Settings. Select iTunes & App Stores. Select your Apple ID and enter your password. In the Edit section, select Payment Information. Enter your credit or debit card information, then tap Done. Before buying an app, browse through some reader reviews to see if other users are enjoying their purchase. Also be sure to check the requirements. Some older apps are not optimized for newer iPads, and may not function correctly, or at all. In the Requirements section, it will list what devices the app is compatible with. Make sure you are not accidentally purchasing an app for iPhone that is not designed for the iPad. This bar will show you how long until it is finished downloading and installing. This will create folders that you can use to keep your Home screens from getting cluttered.
Summary: Open the App Store. Check reviews and requirements. Once you’ve selected an app to download, the icon will appear on your Home screen with a loading bar on it. You can categorize apps by dragging them on top of each other.

Sometimes, approaching poetry in a new form can be a fun experiment and get you inspired. Take a familiar form, like a shopping list or a recipe, and write a poem in that form. You may be surprised by how placing content in a new form can shake up your writing practice and create images you may not have thought of with a more traditional form. You may want to find a shopping list or a recipe you have already written and replace the words with words from a poem. Placing an existing poem in a new form can also change up the meaning in the poem and make the poem more interesting visually. If you are looking for a less rigid form, you may decide to try writing a poem in the form of a daily horoscope or a magic spell. Play around with trying to write poetry in these forms and see what comes out of placing your writing a different structure. Another interesting structural device might be using dialogue that you have overheard in public places or among friends and using them as lines in a poem. You may also include dialogue that you have made up, overlapping real world conversations with fictional conversations. This could then create an interesting poem that uses different spoken slang and inflections. A literary form, like a sonnet or a sestina, can actually be a great way to get inspired, especially if you are struggling with how to start a poem. Choose a form you’ve never used before, such as a haiku or a rhyming couplets, and challenge yourself to write a poem or a series of poems in that form. You can look up different literary forms and study the guidelines around the form. Another way to challenge yourself with limits in your poetry is to use constraint based forms. These forms have set rules or constraints that you must follow to create a piece. You can create your own constraints, such as writing a poem that only uses vowels, or use constraints that have been used by other poets.
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One-sentence summary -- Write a poem in the form of a shopping list or a recipe. Create a poem in the form of a horoscope or a magic spell. Write a poem that consists solely of dialogue. Compose a poem using a literary forms, like sonnet, sestina, or haiku. Try a constraints based form.

Problem: Article: Click the "Color Adjust" button that resembles a prism with a ray of light running through it.  This will open a menu that allows you to adjust the colors of the image. Adjust the colors of the images with the following options.   Curves:  The graph at this top of the menu is the curves.  You can adjust the curves by dragging the three tabs below the image.  You can also click "Auto Levels" to automatically detect the best levels for the curves.  Exposure:  Drag the tab in this slider bar to make the image lighter or darker.  Contrast:  Drag the tab in this slider bar to adjust the contrast between the lighter and darker parts of the image.  Highlights:  Drag the tab in this slider bar to increase the lighter parts of the image.  Shadows:  Drag the tab in this slider bar to increase the darker parts of the image.  Saturation:  Drag the tab in this slider bar to strengthen or weaken the colors in the image.  Temperature:  Drag the tab in this slider bar to give the image a "warmer" or "cooler" tone.  Tint:  Drag the tab in this slider bar to add a red or green color overlay to the image.  Sepia:  Drag the tab in this slider bar to add a golden tint to the image.  Sharpness:  Drag the tab in this slider bar to sharpen or blur the image.
Summary:
Click . Adjust the color.