Article: Organizing your emails means finally making a decision about all of those emails you've been unwilling or unable to act on.  To make this process simple, give yourself only two options: file or delete.  You'll need a method of criteria to determine which emails you will save and which you'll ultimately delete.  Keeping in mind your primary goal will help with this.  If your primary goal is to have an empty inbox each evening, you'll need to create file folders that correspond with your important emails and you'll need to be open to deleting a lot of emails. To develop your criteria ask yourself this: Have you already taken action on the email?  Is there any important information in the email that you need to keep for your records?  How old is the email?  Is the email still relevant somehow? Generally, most emails older than 30 days should be tossed. Exceptions would be emails with critical information, such as correspondence between you and a supervisor or receipts.  Most emails dated within the past 30 days may be kept because you still may need to act on these newer emails; or they may contain relevant information you need to keep. The process of creating a library of folders will be unique to your email provider.  However, there is a general way to create folders that can easily be applied to any email provider, such as Gmail, Hotmail, Yahoo! Mail, Outlook and iCloud.  Once logged in to your email account, look along the top of your inbox or along the panel on the left side for an option to add a new folder.  You may have to click a “Folders” tab to open up a dropdown menu or scroll down along the left-side panel to find this option.  Once you find and click the option to add a new folder, a new window will appear allowing you to type in the name of your new folder.  When you've named your folder, press “Enter” or click “Create” or “Add,” to finalize your new folder. If you have years' worth of emails, first create sweep folders to jumpstart and simplify your organizing efforts.  Sweep folders allow you to “sweep away” large batches of emails at once.  It makes more sense to do this by categorizing your emails by time.  Create new folders and label them by year, quarter or month, whichever works best for you.  You don't need a folder for the current time period because your inbox will act as that folder.  For the emails you currently receive and wish to save, create folders to arrange them into separate categories.  If you're organizing your personal email, your general categories could be: Monthly bills, Children's school or daycare, Deals, and Important.   If you're organizing work email, some suggested folders are: Meetings, Accounts, Invoices, Customer Service, and Important.  If your emails are difficult to narrow down, simply label a few files: Very Important, Important, and Not Very Important. You can create folders within folders.  This may be necessary if you receive tons of emails that can't be adequately organized into basic categories.  For example, if your personal email has a folder labeled Receipts, you may need a sub-folder to separate school-related expenses, household expenses, and entertainment receipts.  The process for creating a sub-folder should not be much different from creating a folder.  Repeat the process of adding a new folder, but look for an option to place the folder within an already existing folder. Once your new folders have been created, they should appear in the “Folders” panel located on the left side of your inbox or under the “Folders” tab along the top of your inbox.  Locate their placement, so that once you tag or file your emails, you'll know where to find them.  You can navigate between your inbox and folders by clicking “Inbox” to view items in your inbox and then clicking a folder name to access that particular folder. Before beginning the process of clearing out your inbox, sweep away a bulk of your “old” emails to narrow the focus of your organizational efforts to your current emails.  To isolate emails by date, you'll need to perform an advanced search of your inbox.  Look near the right edge of the search bar for a down arrow and click it. If your email program is Outlook, you will likely have to put your cursor in the box by clicking the search box.  Now look for a link that specifies “advanced search” or “search options.”  Click it to select your search options. Locate the option to search by date and fill in the date range you'd prefer.  You can choose to isolate emails within a certain date range, before or after a certain date, or emails sent on a particular day. The emails left in your inbox will be the primary focus of your organization efforts today.  You will eventually tackle older emails following the same methods detailed here, but to make this a simple and quick process we'll focus on current emails.  Some older emails may get deleted or moved to a folder if they come up in search results during the clearing out process.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Prepare to make a decision about every email in your inbox. Create folders to organize the contents of your inbox. Create sub-folders, if necessary. Make sure you know how to access your new folders. Do a sweep of your inbox.
Article: This is on the upper-right corner of your Google+ home page. This will open the Hangouts panel on the right side. Click the magnifying glass icon at the very top of the Hangouts panel to reveal a search bar. This will allow you to enter phone numbers on the search bar. If the number you’re calling is outside your region, click on the country flag icon on the left side of the search bar and choose the country you’re about to make a call to from the drop-down menu. A Hangout window will appear and dial the numbers you entered. Once you’re connected through, you’ll be able to talk to with the person you’re calling. Click the red phone icon on the Hangouts window once you’re done to disconnect the call.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Click the Hangouts icon (closing quotation mark). Open the search bar. Click the phone icon on the right side of the search bar. Click the phone icon displayed next to the number you typed in to start the call. Wait for the call to connect. End the call.
Article: If you feel comfortable handling computer hardware and have another computer available, you can have full access to the information by connecting the hard disk to another computer. This section assumes that you have some basic knowledge of computer hardware. Pull out the power, monitor cables, PS/2 and USB devices, the speakers, etc. All cables and external devices must be removed.    Be sure to set the jumper to the correct setting, for now you may want to set it to "slave". Copy the information you want to save.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Be ready. Shut down your computer and disconnect everything. Open up the computer case. Locate the hard disk. Disconnect the power and IDE/Serial ATA cables. Either mount the drive to another computer or use an IDE/Serial ATA to USB  device. Boot up the second computer and log in. Put the drive back in the original computer and wipe everything, then reinstall Windows as usual.