Q: Make sure that this is a new, blank, CD-RW-type CD. If you're using a computer without a DVD drive, you'll need to buy an external USB DVD drive for your computer before you can proceed. Click the Windows logo in the bottom-left corner of the screen. This will search your computer for the Windows Media Player app. It's the blue box with an orange-and-white "Play" button on it. You'll find this at the top of the Start window. If you don't see Windows Media Player here, your computer doesn't have Windows Media Player on it and you won't be able to convert your protected music. Click the Library tab in the upper-left side of the Windows Media Player window, double-click Music on the resulting page, and double-click All Music on the final page. Right-click the sorting options bar near the top of the window, click Choose columns... in the drop-down menu, scroll down and check the "Protected" box, click OK, and click the Protected tab in the sorting bar. This will sort your Windows Media Player library into protected and non-protected files. You may have to scroll left or right to see the Protected tab. It's in the upper-right side of the window. Doing so opens the Burn pane on the right side of the window. While holding down Ctrl, click each song that you want to convert. This pane is on the right side of the window. You should see the music appear in the Burn pane. It's in the upper-left side of the Burn pane. Your music will begin burning onto the CD. This may take several minutes. Once the CD finishes burning, you can proceed with converting the music. . Once you've burned the protected audio onto the CD, you can rip the CD back into Media Player using the "Rip CD" feature. before burning more music onto it. If you want to convert another 80 minutes of music, make sure that you wipe clean the CD before burning the music in question onto it.
A: Insert a CD into your computer. Open Start . Type windows media player into Start. Click Windows Media Player. Open your music library. Find protected songs. Click the Burn tab. Select up to 80 minutes of protected music. Click and drag the music into the Burn pane. Click Start burn. Wait for the CD to finish burning. Rip the CD's music to MP3 Format the CD

Q: Follow through on your commitments and take care of yourself and your activities on your own as much as you can. If you do get in trouble for some reason, be honest and accept whatever consequences might follow. By holding yourself accountable for your own actions, you can show your maturity to your parents and others. For example, if your friends have invited you to a sleepover but you already agreed to babysit your younger siblings that night, politely turn your friends down. It might be hard, but being mature means sticking to your commitments and showing you can be trusted to follow through. . Having good manners shows respect. Proper behavior also helps adults see you as more mature. Good manners cover a wide range of behaviors: saying “yes, sir/ma’am,” answering the phone with “hello,” not interrupting others’ conversations, chewing with your mouth closed, and holding the door for the person walking behind you. Many rules of etiquette may already have been explained to you. However, you can ask your parents or other adults, “How can I show good manners?” to learn more. A mature person doesn’t expect others to go around cleaning up their messes. If you’re a teen trying to be mature, then you’ll want to start picking up behind yourself. This means putting your plate away after meals and wiping up any spills. You should also return games, movies, or books to their proper place after using them.  Keep your room tidy by tossing dirty clothes in the laundry and putting away clean clothes in drawers or in the closet. Make your bed each morning immediately after you get up. Place your book bag on a hook behind the door to keep it off the floor. Line up shoes under your bed or on shelves in your closet so you and your parents don’t trip over them. Make it easier to tidy by setting a timer for 20 minutes and doing a deep-clean of your room once a day. Play some music to make the time go faster. A mature teen knows to say “no” to delinquent behaviors. Using alcohol and drugs, lying, stealing, fighting, acting recklessly, or destroying others’ property will only get you into trouble or hurt. Instead, be drug-free, wear your seat belt when driving or riding in a car, and stay away from negative influences.
A: Be responsible and own up to your actions. Use your manners Clean up after yourself. Develop smart and healthy habits.

Q: Partially erupted (also called impacted) wisdom teeth, as well as ones that grow crooked, greatly increase the risk of an infection. Impacted and crooked wisdom teeth can create little pockets of space underneath the pericoronal flap where bacteria collect and flourish. Common signs of an infected wisdom tooth include: considerable gum swelling, severe pain, mild fever, swollen lymph nodes in your neck and along the edge of your jaw, pus around the inflamed tissue, bad breath and an unpleasant taste in your mouth.  The type of pain associated with an infected wisdom tooth is often a constant dull ache combined with infrequent sharp and shooting pains. Pus is a grayish-white color and made from white blood cells of the immune system. These specialized cells rush to the infection site to kill bacteria, then they die and form pus. Bad breath can also be caused by trapped and rotting food underneath pericoronal flaps. Even if your wisdom teeth grow in crooked and become impacted within your jaw bone, they may not cause pain and other noticeable symptoms; however, with some time (even just a few weeks), they often start to crowd other teeth and push them out of alignment. This "domino effect" can eventually affect your teeth that are visible when you smile, making them twisted or crooked looking. If you think your front teeth are suddenly getting crooked or twisted, compare your current smile to older photographs.  If your wisdom teeth are pushing others too far out of place, your dentist may recommend you have them removed. Once wisdom teeth are removed (extracted), other crooked teeth can slowly become realigned again naturally after a few weeks or months. Although some short-term tolerable pain and inflammation is normal with erupting wisdom teeth, chronic (long-term) pain and swelling is not. Wisdom teeth that fully grow in above the gum line don't usually cause much pain or swelling beyond a few weeks. Severe pain and inflammation that lasts for more than a few weeks is more common with impacted wisdom teeth that remain in the jaw bone. Impacted wisdom teeth that lead to severe and/or chronic symptoms should be removed.  People with small jaws and mouths are much more likely to have impacted wisdom teeth that cause significant pain and swelling. Although impacted wisdom teeth might not directly cause symptoms, they can promote decay in other teeth or surrounding gum tissue that can lead to long-term pain. Deciding when to go to the dentist depends on your pain tolerance and ability to be patient. As a general rule, if the pain keeps you from getting sleep (without medication) for more than three to five days, then it's best to get your teeth checked out.
A:
Be on the alert for an infection. Check your front teeth for crookedness. Chronic pain and swelling is not normal.