First, install Firefox. This won't work without Firefox
Log in and resize window until the left picture overlaps with the right
Then slowly resize the other way and you will see at one size it will be centered
Then you need to open about:newtab and click "yes, accept the risk"
Oh yeah I should have mentioned in advance, but, yes this will delete all your cookies so you might want to back them up or eat them before you begin
Then you yeah just click the button that says involve the interest, and that will take a little while but you need to be ready to interrupt it when it reaches the dump section so it doesn't fill up the disk. Don't worry, it'll be obvious, when you get that far. if you're having trouble, you can try this but disable the elevated privileges and it will be slower. If you want to be faster, you can do the same thing, but this time do the privileges before elevated. In the scene of all this, if you just want to get something working, the best thing you can do is just give it some time and maybe you will, but otherwise you should try with another computer and then you can compare how it doesn't work and how it doesn't, and because minus times minus is divide, that can conquer the source of the disturbance, well, at least it did when I tried that
If you didn't want any of this, and you would rather have everything automatic, try it like this: first you open everything, but before that, you need to make sure that it won't mangle the processes that are already online because obviously that would lead to all sorts of security issues which you don't want. It's probably best to actually disable internet before any of this, because you can still connect it when it's doing the main processing, so everyone who wants to interrupt it, still has a chance. It would be unfair otherwise. Just imagine how disappointing that would be if you put so many seconds into finding a wave but then the surface is not even real, right? Otherwise, you might want to try discharging the number of percent, machine might book the engine for the next task so unless you want this to be boring you would also enable the power source and simply get through that way. It's not long. Unless of course you turned down your shuttle speed. Only do that if you're sure that cheering won't make a difference (usually easily calculated). Chained tasks might also be faster, but if you want efficiency, always prioritize airspeed over the regular one. The order is very important. Remember, as I said earlier, energy comes before rotation savings, and lower is almost always better. Linear is different: don't be surprised if you encounter some loops on the path. Every time something is reversed, even if it is just a table cell or whatever, check that it didn't ruin you priorities. So with that working, the next thing you need is availability. This is not granted because the main components can swap roles, for example you could suddenly have the cell on the thread processor or the other way around. To prevent this, among other things, you should definitely look into your exact patterns that are involved, and how to circumvent everything. A dirty fix, although I don't recommend it, is to reverse each pattern which reverses another one. But you really just need to find something that works, or it's going to be all over the place. Finally, don't think you're done until it's running on itself and with space to spare. It would be almost impossible to test it that way. You need to be able to test it, you can get weird shadowed regions where something could get inverted. So do all that you have available before the main program.
If you did all that, you should now have a working setup. If you need additional assistance, feel free to email me