Showing posts with label facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label facebook. Show all posts

Monday, April 8, 2013

Facebook has been blocking incoming messages since October 2012.


I have now found two Facebook conversations from the end of September 2012 where replies ended up in Facebook's spam filter because I was not friends with the person I was speaking to. It appears that Facebook started treating these as spam on 1st October 2012.

To see what messages you have missed you need to look in your "other" folder.

This is where your "other" (spam) folder is:

  • Log into Facebook. Go to the top left of the page. 
  • Click on the two speech bubbles symbol. 
  • Under your list of messages there is a link that says "see all". 
  • Click on this. At the top of the next page you should see Inbox and next to that Other. 
  • Click on other.
  • Now you can click on all the messages that are sitting in there.


This is the quick way to get to it:
Make sure you are logged into facebook and go here to see yours:

https://www.facebook.com/messages/other

You may want to share this information with your friends.








Monday, September 24, 2012

Facebook stopped working in Internet Explorer

This has been driving me batty for the past week.

Internet Explorer and then Chrome stopped opening Facebook even via an SSL connection. The best I ever got was a view of the first block of posts on my timeline but without the ability to click on anything.

I tried clearing the cache, then deleting and rebuilding my Chrome profile, but this had no effect. However, in Internet Explorer I went to Tools > Manage Add-Ons and disabled all of them for testing. It turns out it did not like Script Proxy by McAfee. I now have Facebook working on IE. Now just to try and get Chrome working.

Thursday, September 30, 2010

How to kill the social networks.

After being de-friended by three people on Facebook in the past few days I felt very hurt so decided to get some revenge by randomly selecting three other people and de-friending them. Immature, perhaps, but it strikes me that if anyone wanted to destroy social networking the simplest way would be to encourage people to delete three friends at random. This would cause so much ill feeling that the ensuing chaos would cause the networks themselves to collapse along with their privacy issues and advertising income.

Friday, August 6, 2010

How to start promoting your business or club using Twitter and Facebook

One of the best ways to increase the spread and influence of your business is through social networking, especially Facebook and Twitter. I would recommend all businesses to have a Facebook page and a Twitter feed especially if they have regular news updates to publish. Its a convenient and cheap way to get that information to customers and it keeps you in their minds the next time they want something that you supply.

Both of these services use short status updates which can contain your message and a link to a related web page. If someone "likes" your Facebook page then your status updates will appear in their "most recent" or "top news" feeds. The position of it on the list may change if people are commenting on it. Twitter is slightly more haphazard as your update will appear chronologically in among the updates of everyone else your follower is following, but it is still a very good communication tool.

A personal user of Facebook and Twitter would probably not want the same status updates going to each feed, because a personal Facebook page is restricted to friends only with Twitter usually being public. A business, on the other hand, would probably want both accounts carrying the same news so there is an easy way to achieve this.

1. Create a Facebook page for your business (not a group).
2. Create a Twitter profile.
3. Go to http://www.facebook.com/twitter/ and connect the two accounts.

Once this has been done any status updates you make to your Facebook page will automatically be sent out on Twitter with a shortened link to the original page on Facebook.

Be prepared to interact with users on both services by regularly checking and engaging in discussions and comment threads on Facebook.

Twitter has a number of third party automation tools which you will want to start using once you get more involved with it. One of these is www.socialoomph.com which can do a number of clever things including sending a personal message autoresponse to anyone who follows you and automatically follow them back. This can allow you to grow your network without having to manually check and follow each new follower. Socialoomph can also be used to trickle feed updates automatically at certain times. 

If you have a blog then www.twitterfeed.com can send an update to twitter each time you add a new article. This can be useful in retaining engagement with customers.

This is just the start, but remember it is about building and engaging with a community of people who have similar interests to you. Whatever updates you send out, my advice would be to limit it to one in five of a commercial nature. The rest should be informational or people will just start ignoring you or not feel good about your organisation.