Q: Measure the dimensions of your garden bed using a tape measure. You will need the length, width, and depth of the bed. Place those measurements into an online soil volume calculator. Find one of these by searching on the Internet. You can try this one: https://www.gardeners.com/how-to/soil-calculator/7558.html Keep in mind that you’ll be mixing the soil with compost. So the number you get from the calculator will be the volume you should have after you’ve combined compost with your soil. The best soil to use is the soil that is native to your area. If you have soil to spare in your yard, simply gather the amount that you need in a bucket or wheelbarrow and move it over to your raised garden bed. If you don’t have easy access to soil, you can purchase some topsoil or a faux soil mixture from a gardening supply store. If you’re mixing purchased soil with soil from your yard, make sure they both have a similar consistency. Inconsistent soil can cause problems for water drainage. or purchase some. You can make your own compost by decomposing organic material in a compost bin. If you have enough from your personal compost pile, simply use what you have. If you don’t compost or need to supplement your supply, purchase compost from a gardening supply store. Read the bag or ask the store assistant to find out what materials went into the compost. The best compost will be made primarily from plant matter, food scraps, and manure. Your goal should be have to an even mixture of compost and soil. Measure the soil and compost before pouring them into the bed to be precise, or simply gauge the amounts by eye. Don’t worry about being completely exact. Once you’ve poured both soil and compost into the bed, mix them thoroughly using either your hands or a gardening tool, like a till. Wear gloves if you’re mixing with your hands. Simply pull out rocks whenever you see them and place them somewhere else in your yard. Too many large rocks can make it difficult for plants to grow. How high you fill the bed depends on personal preference and the plants you’ll be growing. If your plants will grow straight up, like tomatoes, keep the soil mixture flush with the top of the bed. If you’re mainly growing flowers, leave some space between the top of the soil and the top of the bed. This way the bloom of the flower will be more prominently displayed.
A: Calculate how much soil you will need. Gather native soil from your yard if possible. Purchase nutrient-rich mixtures if you can’t use native soil.  Make your own compost Mix soil and compost using at a 1:1 ratio. Remove any rocks from the mixture. Fill your garden bed to the top or nearly the top.

Q: Try to learn every note of a song and sing it perfectly to improve your control over your pitch. It’s best to record yourself with just a backing track that has the instrumental with no voice, but if you don’t have one available, you can sing along with the vocals on the original track.  Record and play back your song over and over, taking notes and making improvements every time. As you listen to yourself sing, write down the parts that you do very well and the parts that need improvement. You can find backing tracks by looking for karaoke versions of songs in online videos, in a music store, or from online retailers. The lengths of your vocal cords control your pitch. Shorter vocal cords produce higher-pitched sounds than longer vocal cords. There is nothing you can do to change the lengths and so some sounds will always be outside your ability to reach. Therefore, when choosing which songs to learn to sing, it's important to select those within your vocal range. Children tend to sing in the same higher pitch because they have short vocal cords that have not yet fully developed. As people get older and their vocal chords change, their voices change as well. A singer’s repertoire usually consists of three songs that they can sing very well. Begin your repertoire by learning and completely mastering singing one song in tune. Your repertoire should always be changing as you improve your skills. Trade out new songs with old songs, or increase the number of songs, as you feel comfortable and master the material. Push the limits of your voice and your ability to carry the notes by learning more difficult songs (that are, of course, within your range). Be diligent about adding new songs to your repertoire, continuously evaluating your performance, and making necessary tweaks to improve upon it.
A: Apply your newly learned vocal control by mastering a song. Recognize and accept that some notes are outside your vocal range. Build a repertoire of songs you are comfortable singing. Challenge yourself with increasingly difficult songs.

Q: Select from either Phone or Tablet as they have different swipe patterns for the default commands. If the blue light on the bottom of the button is out, the command is disabled. Tap the drop-down menu in the right of the app name and select user gestures. Here you can record your own gesture commands, which will override default gestures. Then you will configure what the gesture does, what area the gesture can be registered, and so forth. Done! Now your device has gesture control!
A: Select the gesture group for your device. Turn off your undesired commands from the default commands list by tapping on the ON button. Set user gestures. Blacklist apps you don’t want gesture controls to register.

Q: appears. The menu that appears is known as the Windows 8 “Charms” bar.   If you had other programs running before starting, some may prevent the process from proceeding. If this is the case click the Restart Anyway option.
A:
Move your cursor to the top or bottom right corner of the screen. Click Settings. Click the Power button. Click Restart.