In response to Action and habit
Comment author: XFrequentist 02 June 2011 09:24:45PM *  6 points [-]

Currently on the front page of Hacker News. Very nice!

ETA: Never click on Hacker News unless you want a new addiction. Seriously.

Comment author: mail2345 03 June 2011 03:18:59AM 6 points [-]

It might be preferable to link to the comments section instead of the main page, just in case something interesting pops up there.

Comment author: TheOtherDave 10 February 2011 11:03:35PM 2 points [-]

A very good friend of mine created her Facebook account just a few weeks ago, and I still think she's cool. So getting into the game late is at least sometimes recoverable from.

Adding everyone you are even tangentially acquainted with seems to be the social convention, including people you've just met; it's common for me to receive facebook invites after meeting someone at a party, for example.

FB has some tools for bulk-link-farming... e.g., it will look at your email if you let it and contact everyone whose name appears in it who has a FB account. I did this when I created my FB account (a couple of years ago) and it worked pretty well.

As far as I know, there's no way to hide your friends.

The teenagers of my acquaintance frequently use fake names on Facebook to subvert searches. The adults frequently create multiple Facebook profiles, more or less for the same reason.

Comment author: mail2345 11 February 2011 05:51:28PM 0 points [-]

The Friend List feature is a subsitute for multiple accounts. You can have diffrent privacy settings for each list, such as hiding tagged images.

Comment author: Wei_Dai 08 February 2011 09:46:50PM 2 points [-]

From this, it sounds like I was lucky that I took a typing class in in high school (mostly because I wanted some easy credits). Do most schools not offer this?

Comment author: mail2345 09 February 2011 06:59:02AM 1 point [-]

My 6th grade class was taught touch typing, reinforced with some typing games that became surprisingly popular. High school also had a typing class for the business path, which was dropped when the administration realised that most of the students didn't need the course or were failing. Nothing about proper posture in either though, which needless to say is quite essential to proper touch typing.