Thursday, June 25, 2020

How to Find Your Missing Friends Again




Welcome to the wonderful world of corporate censorship. We already know that Google, Youtube, Twitter and Facebook shadow ban conservatives. One of the irritating consequences of Facebook's busybody policies is the disappearance of your friends from your Facebook Newsfeed. Here's how it works:
  1. On the Home Facebook page, newsfeed, Facebook sets the default to Top Stories.
  2. Even if you set the newsfeed to something else, every day or two, Facebook resets your newsfeed back to Top Stories.
  3. "Top Stories" is Facebook's edited newsfeed. Their algorithm edits out things they don't think you ought to see. It tends, in my case to shift posts I see in a distinctly leftward direction.
  4. If you want to continue to see your friends' posts, you have to keep changing the feed back to "Most Recent".  
  5. Or you can do this:
Download a program called Facebook Purity or as it's now known "Fluff-Busting Purity".

This app loads on top of your browser to provide a dashboard for Facebook that allows you to adjust settings, block spam and ads and, my favorite bit - it can prevent Facebook from resetting your newsfeed to "Top Stories" and blocking your friends so that you can't see them on your feed. It puts the letters FBP at the top of the Facebook webpages. You just click on it and select the settings you want. It makes your Facebook time more like what you want instead of what they want.

There use to be a way to reset your newsfeed to "Most Recent", but in late 2020 they hid that button under several layers of menus. Then in late March 2021, they did away with the link to change back to "most recent."  Now, without the FBP app, you simply cannot find a consistent way to switch your newsfeed back from the FB "Top Stories" censored feed and you'll miss all your conservative friends' very entertaining memes. And you will be effectively shadow-banned if you post conservative things.

Click the link above, download FBP and install it. Once you set the newsfeed you'll see your friends again. Facebook's going to hate that!

© 2020 by Tom King



Friday, November 30, 2018

How I Saved My Dying Hard Drive


I've got this 13 year-old 320 GB Seagate hard drive that has been my D: drive in my 3rd computer now. It's venerable to say the least. The power out here in the Fifteen Acre Woods likes to cut out. It used to do that a lot back when we lived out at Lake Palestine in Texas, so I bought a battery backup to preserve the drives in my computer because they said you ought to do that. Well eventually the first one stopped charging so I bought a second and the first one became a glorified surge protector. A couple of years ago (here I hang my head in shame) the second backup battery stopped charging. We've been pretty close to the wire financially the past few years, so I haven't replaced it.

So this morning, after leaving the computer on all night running a virus check, I woke to find it shut off, likely do to one of those power glitches we have pretty often around here. AND my D: drive which has all my original data on it would not show up. The computer couldn't read it. I panicked.

Then I calmed down and went to Youtube.
There I found a guy with a Youtube channel called DIY Perks and got some answers to what was happening. He suggested several things that data recovery professionals say you should never do like tapping the case and (horror of horrors) opening the case and unsticking the drive manually. Data recovery professionals were aghast and loud in their condemnation of this practice. Yeah, of course they were!

Now data recovery professionals charge something like $750 an hour for this sort of data recovery and since I cannot afford that, I decided to give the DIY guy a try. It can be hazardous but the only options the professionals offered was to toss the drive as a total loss or let them do it for a couple or three thousand bucks. I had pictures on there and legal documents, so I gave it a try.  Here's what seems to have happened to my drive:

When the power goes off, the heads of the hard drive are often positioned over the platter (the disk). If that happens and the heads aren't parked, they can get stuck that way. If the drive is inside your computer, there's not much you can do. If you can get the drive outside the case where you can get your hands on it, it turns out there is something you can do.  Since this drive was my secondary data drive, the computer could start without it, although it required I remove the old drive. The computer couldn't read the old drive so it would abort the boot process when it tried to get the Seagate drive going. Fortunately, I have another 320 GB hard drive I just bought a few weeks ago. So here's what I did.
  1. I pulled the old drive from the computer and put the new one in its place.
  2. I closed up the case, reconnected everything and booted it up. To my joy it booted up seamlessly.
  3. Because the heads might be stuck, I held up the old drive so that it was on its side. I twisted it back and forth a few times along it's flat side in order to perhaps cause the platters to rotate slightly and perhaps free the stuck heads or loosen the platters so they can spin.
  4. I tapped the drive gently a couple of times on my desk, tapping it on its back end. Same reason - to unstick the heads. Be gentle and don't tap or shake up and down. If the heads touch the platter they can damage your data. You want the heads to move back and forth to the platter, not up and down.
  5. I then inserted the drive into my Wavlink docking station where the replacement hard drive (now inside the case) had been previously docked. I switched on the docking station and (joy of joys), the old drive spun right up.
My trusty docking station. You've just GOT
to have one of these wonderful devices!
While I do not recommend this procedure (so you are not allowed to sue me now because I said that), it seems to have worked and given the alternative of throwing my precious data away without trying to get it back, it was darn well worth it to me to give it a try.

A couple of caveats.  

  • This only works if your drive is not entirely dead (unlike the wicked old witch).
  • You can hit the drive case too hard and damage your data, so be careful.
  • Always back up your important stuff (some of which I had already backed up but wasn't through yet).
  • Transfer your data to a new drive as soon as you can. Once you've transferred all the data off your old drive, consider it untrustworthy and don't use it for anything important.
 My old drive is right now busily backing itself up onto the new drive and making itself obsolete. I'll probably format it and use it for my XP virtual machine. If it fails there won't be anything on it I can't afford to lose.

Back in the olden days (the early 90s) I had one old hard drive that I had to get really creative to start, so I know about cranky hard drives. It was a 30 mb drive so you can get an idea of how long ago that was. It was my computer at work and it would get stuck during bootup. I finally set the case to one side where it was easy to get to and took off the screws. When I went to start work every day, I would pull the case off, reach in and spin the little silver thing on top of the drive and manually start the disk to spinning. It would boot right up. Once it warmed up, it ran like a top the rest of the day. The computer went to someone else when I was transferred to public relations. I wonder if they ever got my replacement a new hard drive or not?  I had a car about that time that the starter had died on it and I couldn't afford a new one right then. So I always had to park on a hill where I could push it and start it rolling. Thank heavens I had a standard shift. I did wind up having to buy a new clutch for it though. It didn't like being popped every time you started it.

Good luck with getting your data off of your sticky hard drive. There are many ways to skin a computer cat.

Tom King © 2018





Monday, May 07, 2018

Managing Energetic Kids - The Fox & the Hounds Game



Age and Intelligence beats youth and energy, but only if you actually use your aged intelligence. Kids are notoriously energetic. It is the purpose of every teacher and youth leader to wear down kids so they will take a nap and give you a badly needed break.

The great traditional game for wearing out children is "Tag".  There's only a problem with Tag as played with today's precious snowflakes. The problem is that the person who is "It" is the center of attention. And today's children want to be the center of attention no matter what.

So when we played tag with our school kids and my children in residential treatment, we used to have a problem getting the "It" person to chase and tag anyone. They wanted to stay "It" so they only pretended to chase people. Other kids wanted to be "It" so they would run up to whoever was "It" and try to make him tag them. Everybody got bored and stopped playing.

The solution was to invert the game so you have to run in order to be the center of attention. So we came up with this game called "The Fox and the Hounds".  Here's how you play.


THE FOX AND THE HOUNDS


Materials:
  • Large playing field, or lightly wooded terrain.
  • Faux fur tail - basically a piece of fake fur or soft cloth about three feet long

Players:

There are no teams. There is one person who is the fox and everyone else is a hound. Can be played by 3 or more people.  If you have 20 or so kids, you can have multiple foxes for completely chaotic (and wonderfully exhausting) play.

How to play:
  1. Select your first fox. Explain that he or she remains the fox until someone grabs their tail. The fur tale is inserted in the back of the child's belt or pants (not too far unless you want to lose your pants when someone pulls your tail out.
  2. Explain to the rest that they are hounds and their job is to chase the fox, while making barking or baying sounds just like hounds.
  3. Give the fox a 15 second head start and turn him loose. Signal the hounds to begin the chase and watch the fun.
  4. When the hounds run down the fox and someone grabs its tail, stop the game. 
  5. Set up the new hound with a tail and turn him loose again, wait the 15 seconds and then release the hounds!
  6. Everybody wants to be the fox so the chase gets pretty energetic. The game usually lasts about 20 or 30 minutes before everyone is exhausted. 
Strategy Tips:
  • The structure of the game is a great equalizer. If the fastest kid in the group becomes the fox, the "hounds" learn pretty quickly to do what a wolf pack does. They chain run the fox. A couple of kids chase him till they get tired, then another couple of kids chase him and so forth until he gets exhausted and slows down to the point where someone can catch him. The chase patterns get so mixed up that even the slowest kids may snag the tail as the fox runs past.
  • At any rate the game is fast-paced, exhausting and guaranteed to wear out the little darlings using their own desire to be the center of attention against them. The Fox has everyone chasing him so he's the center of attention so he runs very fast to retain the attention of the group. The hounds want to BE the center of attention so they run very fast to catch him. This adds up to one exhausting session.

This one works great if you'd like the kids to go home worn out and sleep soundly. You have to learn to judge how tired they are or they nod off in their mashed potatoes at supper.

© 2018 by Tom King