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  2. Modal window - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modal_window

    Modal windows are prone to mode errors. [1] [2] [3] On the Web, they often show images in detail, such as those implemented by Lightbox library, or are used for hover ads. [4] [5] The opposite of modal is modeless. Modeless windows don't block the main window, so the user can switch their focus between them, treating them as palette windows.

  3. Facebook 3D Posts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facebook_3D_Posts

    Facebook 3D Posts was a feature on the social networking website Facebook. It was first enabled on October 11, 2017 by introducing a new native 3D media type in Facebook News Feed . Initially the users could only post 3D objects from Oculus Medium and marker drawings from Spaces directly to Facebook as fully interactive 3D objects.

  4. List of Facebook features - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Facebook_features

    A user's wall is visible to anyone with the ability to see their full profile, and friends' wall posts appear in the user's News Feed. In July 2007, Facebook allowed users to post attachments to the wall, whereas previously the wall was limited to text only. [12] In May 2008, the Wall-to-Wall for each profile was limited to only 40 posts.

  5. Facebook like button - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facebook_like_button

    The Like button is one of Facebook's social plug-ins, which are features for websites outside Facebook as part of its Open Graph. [ 24 ] [ 25 ] Speaking at the company's F8 developer conference on April 21, 2010, the day of the launch, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said "We are building a Web where the default is social".

  6. List of paradoxes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_paradoxes

    Bootstrap paradox (also ontological paradox): You send information/an object to your past self, but you only have that information/object because in the past, you received it from your future self. This means the information/object was never created, yet still exists.

  7. Like button - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Like_button

    2007 X (then called Twitter) post with a star icon to the right as its "favorite" button. Alongside reposts, X (formerly Twitter) users can like posts made on the service, indicated by a heart. Until November 2015, the equivalent of "liking a post" was "favoriting a post" and favorites were symbolized by a gold star (). However, that was ...

  8. Web service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_service

    A web service (WS) is either: . a service offered by an electronic device to another electronic device, communicating with each other via the Internet, or; a server running on a computer device, listening for requests at a particular port over a network, serving web documents (HTML, JSON, XML, images).

  9. Modal testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modal_testing

    Modal impact hammer with interchangeable tips and accompanying temporal and frequency responses. An ideal impact to a structure is a perfect impulse, which has an infinitely small duration, causing a constant amplitude in the frequency domain; this would result in all modes of vibration being excited with equal energy. The impact hammer test is ...