Imagine this. You’re on Facebook. You find an item you think your mom might like. Or your friend, or your Twitter followers, or anybody else who isn’t on Facebook. Or who is on Facebook, but will never see the post you liked. There’s a sneaky way you can create a universal link to a Facebook item so that you can send or post to anyone!
You’ll never guess how you get that link, though. You click the time stamp on the post. Now you’ve opened up a dedicated page just for that post, and its comments. From here, you can copy the web address and paste it wherever fine URLs are pasted.
Let the world marvel at your expertise.
Adapted from “Pogue’s Basics: Tech” (Flatiron Press), by David Pogue.
More from David Pogue:
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Samsung’s Bixby voice assistant is ambitious, powerful, and half-bakedIs through-the-air charging a hoax?
Pogue’s Basics: The secret Start menu in Windows 10
The pizza-making robots that want to change the world
Electrify your existing bike in 2 minutes with these ingenious wheels
Marty Cooper, inventor of the cellphone: The next step is implantables
The David Pogue Review: Windows 10 Creators Update
How a one-of-a-kind business has kept 5,000 kitchens out of landfills
Google’s Nest Cam IQ recognizes burglars’ faces—for a steep price
The 4 people Steve Jobs handpicked to review the iPhone reflect 10 years later
Study: A smartwatch app can detect the heart condition hiding in millions of Americans
David Pogue’s search for the world’s best air-travel app
The little-known iPhone feature that lets blind people see with their fingers
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