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The like button is a feature of social networking service Facebook, where users can like content such as status updates, comments, photos and videos, links shared by friends, and advertisements. The feature was activated February 9, 2009. [ 2 ]
Galaxy X [1] [2] is a postulated dark satellite dwarf galaxy of the Milky Way Galaxy. If it exists, it would be composed mostly of dark matter and interstellar gas with few stars . [ 1 ] [ 3 ] Its proposed location is some 90 kpc (290 kly ) from the Sun, [ 1 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] behind the disk of the Milky Way, [ 1 ] and some 12 kpc (39 kly) in ...
The YouTube Like button "glows" every time a creator says "Smash that Like button." In early 2010, as part of a broader redesign of the service, YouTube switched from a star-based rating system to Like/Dislike buttons. Under the previous system, users could rate videos on a scale from 1 to 5 stars; YouTube staff argued that this change ...
You have the option to reply to a specific comment, share a comment with others, like the comment or dislike the comment. Republishing content Content offered on AOL.com and other AOL branded sites may be used only for personal, non-commercial purposes.
In June 2011, Google Images added a "Search by Image" feature which allowed for reverse image searches directly in the image search-bar without third-party add-ons. This feature allows users to search for an image by dragging and dropping one onto the search bar, uploading one, or copy-pasting a URL that points to an image into the search bar. [12]
Social media platform X is now hiding your likes. In an update posted on the platform formerly known as Twitter earlier this week, X's engineering team said it would be “making Likes private for ...
Galaxy Nexus, a smartphone released in 2011, marketed in Brazil as the "Galaxy X" Galaxy X (galaxy), a postulated satellite galaxy of the Milky Way Galaxy "Galaxy X" (trilogy), a 2009 trilogy of The Hardy Boys novels, see List of Hardy Boys books; Galaxy X (novel), a 2009 novel in the eponymous trilogy of "The Hardy Boys" novels, see List of ...
Openbook was a Facebook-specific search engine, built upon Facebook's publicly available API, [1] which enabled one to search for specific texts on the walls of Facebook subscribers en masse which they had denoted, knowingly or unknowingly, as being available to "Everyone," i.e. to the Internet at large.