Write an article based on this "Click the "My Computer" icon. Insert the DVD into the drive. Right-click the DVD-RW and left-click the "Erase this disc" text. Click the "Next" button."
article: Go to your desktop and click the "My Computer" icon. If there is no icon there, go to "Start," then scroll up to "My Computer." Open up your disc drive by pressing the button on the front of it. Once it opens, stick the DVD into it and close the drive. When the DVD drive closes, it should show up on the "My Computer" screen. It should only take a few seconds for the DVD-RW icon to pop on the screen once you close the disc drive. Clicking "Erase this disc" will bring up a separate screen. This screen should say "Ready to erase disc." Clicking the "Next" button will begin the process of deleting the disc. Wait until the loading bar is complete before closing the window. Your files should now be deleted off the disc.

Write an article based on this "Play the first card. Move the card to its pile. Turn over the next card. Continue playing cards."
article: The middle, or 13th pile has four cards: turn one of them over and place it on top of its stack. Look at the number or face-value of the card. The number or face will determine where the card goes. Starting with the 1 o'clock position, cards belong in the stack associated with their number: Aces go to the 1 o'clock pile, twos go to the 2 o'clock pile, threes go to the 3 o'clock pile, fours go to the 4 o'clock pile, fives go to the 5 o'clock pile, sixes go to the 6 o'clock pile, sevens go to the 7 o'clock pile, eights go to the 8 o'clock pile, nines go to the 9 o'clock pile, tens go to the 10 o'clock pile. For face cards, place the Jacks in the 11 o'clock pile and Queens in the 12 o'clock pile. Kings will be placed in the middle, or 13th pile. When you find the correct pile, slide the card face up, under the stack it belongs in. Turn over the top card of the pile you just played into. This becomes your next card in play. Place that card into the pile in which it belongs. For example, a 7 of diamonds would go facedown into the bottom of the 7 o'clock pile. A Queen of spades would go facedown at the bottom of the 12 o'clock pile. For each card that you turn over and place in the correct pile, flip over the next card from that pile and play it. Clock patience is a fun game to play quickly, so try to place the cards as quickly as you determine where they belong. Continue playing until there are no cards to flip over.

Write an article based on this "Boot into Safe Mode. Open the "Programs and Features" window. Click the "View installed updates" link. Find the update you want to remove. Select the update and click "Uninstall.""
article:
You'll have the best success removing Windows updates if you are running Safe Mode:  Windows 7 and earlier - Reboot your computer and hold F8. Select "Safe Mode" from the menu that appears. Windows 8 and later - Click the Power button in the Start menu or screen. Hold ⇧ Shift and click "Restart." Select "Troubleshoot" → "Advanced options" → "Windows Startup settings" and then click "Restart." Select "Safe Mode" from the menu. Once you're in Safe Mode, you'll need to open the Programs and Features window from the Control Panel:  Windows 7 and earlier - Open the Start menu and select "Control Panel." Select "Programs" or "Programs and Features" (depending on your view settings). Windows 8 and later - Right-click on the Windows button and select "Programs and Features." This can be found in the left menu. A list of installed updates will be displayed. The "Installed on" column can help you find the update that started causing your computer troubles. Windows updates are listed in the "Microsoft Windows" section towards the bottom of the list. You'll be prompted to confirm that you want to remove the update. After confirming, the update will be removed. You can repeat this for any other updates you want to get rid of. If Windows is set to update automatically, the updates you delete will likely download and install on their own again. You'll need to disable automatic updates in Windows Update to prevent installing these specific updates.