Jason Green

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    Jason Green
    Participant

    I use the hide likes feature whenever I share something more personal. It removes that instant comparison feeling. Just tap the three dots on the post → “Hide like count.” Doesn’t delete likes—just hides the numbers from public view.

    Jason Green
    Participant

    Hey, I checked it out last month. It’s super detailed with lore explanations. If you like story-driven analysis, you’ll definitely enjoy Geekzilla’s Silent Hill guide.

    Jason Green
    Participant

    Drop-downs are done via Data Validation. I usually keep my option list on another sheet so the main one looks clean. Highlight the cell, go to Data > Data Validation > List, then point it to that hidden list. If you update the list later, the drop-down updates too. It’s super handy for surveys, project tracking, or keeping inputs standardized. Honestly, it keeps spreadsheets from getting messy with typos or random inputs.

    Jason Green
    Participant

    Purple = video, red = photo, blue = chat/private. That’s Snapchat’s system. Once viewed, the circle disappears. It’s just color coding, not a special feature or hidden trick.

    Jason Green
    Participant

    Hello, the only safe way is using Instagram’s Download Data option. Beyond that, rely on the other person’s copy—avoid third-party “recovery” apps.

    Jason Green
    Participant

    Stories work differently from posts. Archived stories never return to their old timeline spot, but you can re-publish them. Go into Profile → Archive → Stories, pick one, then tap “Share.” That pushes it live again for 24 hours. Or, if you’d rather keep it permanently, tap “Highlight” to add it to your profile’s highlights section. It’s Instagram’s way of letting you recycle content without literally restoring it. I’ve done this with old travel stories—it’s the only way.

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