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Facebook Comments - Social Plugins

Facebook Comments - Social Plugins
A part of the comments plugin is a powerful moderation tool. This tool makes it easy and fast for your community management team to moderate multiple comments at once. Setup To use the comments moderation tool, you need to complete the moderation setup instructions. Moderation Setup Instructions Please note that you cannot use the Graph API to reply to comments made via the Comments Plugin. Dashboard There are 2 ways to navigate to the moderation tool: 1. 2. Moderation View We show both moderation views in the screenshots below. In the moderation table, you can either approve or hide comments depending on their status. 1. In this moderation view, all comments for a specific url will be displayed. 2. In this moderation view, all comments for your application will be displayed. 3. Comments that have been flagged by users or Facebook will be displayed here. Settings For each app, you can define custom settings. Moderators You can promote other people to become the moderator of your comments. Public

Instagram Developer Documentation March 30, 2020 Update: We understand these are challenging times for our developer community, so we are postponing disabling the Instagram Legacy API Platform by 90 days to June 29, 2020. Remaining endpoints on the Legacy API will no longer be available after this date and your app's users may lose functionality. We urge you to migrate to the Instagram Graph API and the Instagram Basic Display API without delay so that users of your app have time to transition as well. FAQs Q: Why should I migrate to the Instagram Graph API platform?

Importing GIS Data Into a GPS Unit GPS units are often used to gather data for export to, and use in, GIS. But there may be times when you might want to do the opposite – take GIS data and export it to a GPS. For example, you might have an area shapefile demarcating survey areas, and it could be helpful to import the boundaries of that area into your GPS unit, so that you’ll know when you’re inside (or outside) the survey area. Or you might have a point shapefile with the positions of sampling spots; it would be convenient to be able to import those sampling spot positions into a GPS as waypoints, and then use the waypoint positions to navigate to them. Two of the programs I’ve posted about earlier have the capability to import GIS data in shapefile format into a GPS unit. There are three kinds of shapefiles: point, line, and area/polygon. GPS Trackmaker – This program has the ability to open point, line and area shapefiles, and upload the data to a GPS. 1. 2. 3. If you do use DNRGarmin, the process is straightforward:

Low Clearance POI - GPS Data Roadtrippers’ Log · tail -f roadtrippers.log

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