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    What's this?
Tricks for getting the old Facebook functionality back
Using Facebook's List feature will allow users to modify their news feeds to mimic the old one.

By

technewsdaily
Thu, Sep 22 2011 at 11:31 AM

Related Topics:

Computers, Facebook, Web
Facebook logo and the old Facebook newsfeed

Photo: ZUMA Press

Facebook has confounded users again with significant changes to profile pages, which has set off a spate of complaints on the social networking site.
 
Facebook’s help discussions have been flooded with criticism. “Hate, hate, hate the new Facebook,” posters railed.
 
Not since the re-do of 2009 have users been taken by surprise by such an eye-popping redesign.
A real-time news ticker similar to a Twitter feed has been added to the right panel, including the most recent posts from friends.
 
A "Top News" section has taken over the upper portion of the page, with automatically selected posts that Facebook has determined to be of most interest to you. Most-recent posts are pushed farther down the page.
 
The top navigation bar now "floats" along as users scroll down the page. New photos appear much larger in updates.
 
Looming partnerships
And there’s more to come. Facebook will host a conference today at its headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif., where additional changes are expected to be announced. For instance, a new media platform originally intended to let users stream music directly has been dialed back, according to an AllThingsDigital report. Streaming music will run through an integration with third-party services such as Spotify, whose CEO is scheduled to speak at the event.
 
Facebook is also expected to reveal partnerships with big-time news services including the Washington Post and CNN. Newspaper-like stories could be added to the "Top News" section, but the details are not known at this time.
 
In the past, Facebook has not allowed users to switch back to an old design once they upgraded to the new one. A handful of users found a workaround for changes made in December 2010: Deactivating accounts for no longer than 30 minutes and then reactivating them resulted in the old layout. Facebook closed that loophole within days.
 
Latest workaround
This time, users were not given the option to upgrade to the new format; they simply woke up yesterday to the new look. But some clever Facebookers came up with a workaround, using "Lists":
 
"Create a custom list and name it 'Most Recent.' Add all of your friends to it. Once created, this list will look and behave exactly like your old news feed,” Thomas Sobiech wrote.
 
Once this customized list is created, each new friend will have to be added to it. Users can manage the content displayed under “Manage Lists” and then “Choose Update Types” to hide certain types of posts, such as game updates. Users with fewer friends will find the workaround much easier to implement than those with thousands of friends.
 
No workarounds have surfaced for the ticker, the floating navigation bar or photos. Those are changes that users will have to put up with unless they quit Facebook altogether, an option Sobiech and others say they are considering.
 
"I have a Google+ account on standby, just in case," Sobiech said.
 
Related on TechNewsDaily:
  • Banned! Top 10 Apps That Got Zapped
  • Social Internet Radio Service Coming to Facebook
  • Google+ Opens to Public, Moves Out of Invitation-Only Phase

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starbuck
Starbuck Sep 27 2011 at 2:39 AM
After I read this article, I logged into Facebook and took a look at my lists. Initially, I had intended to use the instructions provided in the article to return my FB "news feed" to its former glory, but I started poking around instead and it looks to me like the changes might be useful. If it is possible to fine tune privacy settings for any given group - and if it also remains possible to create custom groups - then I think this latest round of changes holds some real potential. If a user simply
.... More
wants to check in with friends and family and play a few games, then the instructions given in this article can be used to reset Facebook. If, on the other hand, a user has reason to want to specialize, as it were, then the ability to create and control custom groups will be very helpful.
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