Originally posted by
beren_writes at LJ Facebook/Twitter work around to get rid of the annoying boxes
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
stolen from
pombagira who pulled it from someone else who pulled it from yet another person :) Yes, this is signal boosting.
Passing this along from my flist. <--I stoleded it from
renleek
Thanks to
midniterose, here is how to stop the crossposting of comments/entries from LJ to sites like Facebook:
There is a way to disable everything. Here is what you have to do:
1. Go to your "Journal" menu, and select "Journal Style"
2. To the right, you'll see what theme you're using, with a link stating "Customize Your Theme". Click that link.
3. Scroll down a little ways, and you'll see that on the left side of your screen, you have multiple options to modify your theme. Click on the "Custom CSS" link, and it should load the options for doing Custom CSS.
4. From here, all you have to do is go to the "Custom Stylesheet", and put in that line.
.b-repost-item {display:none}
once you have it pasted in there, save changes.
Feel free to PASS THIS ON!!
ETA: This prevents the "repost to FB/Twitter" ticky boxes from being displayed when someone comments on one of your posts. It seems to work, UNLESS the person is viewing your page in their own journal style, in which case it might not work.
ETA2: Inserting the code below in your custom CSS box reportedly works for more kinds of journal styles, including custom ones (this courtesy of xnguard):
.b-repost-item, FORM#qrform > TABLE[style="border: 1px solid black;"]:last-child TD[style="vertical-align: top; text-align: right;"]:first-child { display: none !important; }
![[info]](https://l-stat.livejournal.com/img/userinfo.gif)
Passing this along from my flist. <--I stoleded it from
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
Thanks to
![[info]](https://l-stat.livejournal.com/img/userinfo.gif)
There is a way to disable everything. Here is what you have to do:
1. Go to your "Journal" menu, and select "Journal Style"
2. To the right, you'll see what theme you're using, with a link stating "Customize Your Theme". Click that link.
3. Scroll down a little ways, and you'll see that on the left side of your screen, you have multiple options to modify your theme. Click on the "Custom CSS" link, and it should load the options for doing Custom CSS.
4. From here, all you have to do is go to the "Custom Stylesheet", and put in that line.
.b-repost-item {display:none}
once you have it pasted in there, save changes.
Feel free to PASS THIS ON!!
ETA: This prevents the "repost to FB/Twitter" ticky boxes from being displayed when someone comments on one of your posts. It seems to work, UNLESS the person is viewing your page in their own journal style, in which case it might not work.
ETA2: Inserting the code below in your custom CSS box reportedly works for more kinds of journal styles, including custom ones (this courtesy of xnguard):
.b-repost-item, FORM#qrform > TABLE[style="border: 1px solid black;"]:last-child TD[style="vertical-align: top; text-align: right;"]:first-child { display: none !important; }
BLUE |
You give your love and friendship unconditionally. You enjoy long, thoughtful conversations rich in philosophy and spirituality. You are very loyal and intuitive.
Dear Santa
Dec. 3rd, 2008 04:57 pm![]() Dear Santa, This year I've been busy! Last week I set ![]() ![]() ![]() Overall, I've been nice (536 points). For Christmas I deserve a Sony Playstation 3! Sincerely, |
Procrastinating again XP
Apr. 21st, 2008 01:09 am
You're a half-caf latte!
You're the perfect blend of caffeinated coffee and decaf. You're the happy medium between high-intensity focus and spaced-out daydreaming. Maybe you think you're indecisive, because you tend to choose the safe, middle ground in any debate, but other people appreciate your non-confrontational ways. You're easygoing and willing to compromise, so your friendships and relationships probably last a long time.

You are 11:59 a.m.
You are late-sleepy relaxation, the half-awake moment when you realize it's morning, but you don't have to get up, because there's no place you have to be. You are that cozy spot under the covers where everything feels temporarily perfect, even if you know you'll eventually have to wiggle out and start the day. Maybe you're the artistic type, who doesn't function well on a normal schedule. Sleep's important to you, and you like the freedom of sleeping as late as you want (especially since that is closely related to the freedom to stay up as late as you want). You like to roll out of bed, put on some comfy clothes, and get a laid back start to the day. If not everything on your list gets accomplished, no worries. Your only priority is having no priorities ? you just want to take things at a slow, mellow pace.
A Victorian Novel quiz ...
Mar. 17th, 2008 05:07 amYour Period Drama Life -For Girls (Lovely pictures, very long and detailed)

You and your father lived in India for the sole purpose of making your period drama setting a bit more exotic than the rest of the girls'. Your independent and headstrong nature made simple requests from your father very difficult to persuade you to do. Requests such as, "My dear, would you mind going to the market and finding out if that rug merchant will go any lower on the carpet I so admired last week?" You did go to the market for him, but just to satisfy your need for change, you took the back alleys instead of the main streets. Little you knew how such a decision would affect the rest of your life. (DUN DUN DUUUUUUN!)
Out of the shadows, a broad shouldered man ran right into you. His shoulder was bleeding and he was much distressed, as if fearful of some impending danger that was chasing him relentlessly. He told you that some murderous wretches were after him, and unless you wanted to wait around for them to interrogate you in a highly ungentlemanly fashion, you had better follow him and hide in an adjoining alley. You didn't like the sound of ungentlemanly interrogations, and so you followed the man, glad to have listened when the armed (and very violently looking) strangers ran past your hiding place.
Since you were brought up more or less like a lady, you took the broad shouldered (did I mention tall?) man back home to tend to his shoulder and let him take some refreshments. Over lunch, he told you the story of a band of treasure hunters who believed someone in India had a map to the hidden location of the famous sapphire pendant, "Midnight Secret." The tall, broad shouldered, and handsome man's brother was among the band of hunters, but he was killed suddenly; coincidentally, the same night he told his brother that he'd threatened to turn some of the other members in for stealing clues to the map from perfectly innocent people. The tall, dark, and handsome broad shouldered man feared his brother was murdered by the treasure hunters because of certain bits of information his brother left behind, and by constantly spying on the other men.
Unfortunately, the band had found out about his nocturnal habits, and now he was in grave danger. Your father didn't like the tall, dark and handsome broad shouldered man, or his story. He therefore forbade you to see him again, claiming the association was dangerous. Needless to say, you like danger, and didn't really obey his demands.
You and the tall man secretly kept in touch, and he informed you regularly of any new clues he came across that involved either the murder or the map to the pendant.
On a certain evening, you were searching for your missing sketchbook in your father's room, when you discovered an odd crack in the back of the bookshelf. The crack turned out to be a neatly cut square, or rather, a little hiding nook for the map to the Midnight Secret! The truth was that your father had it in his possession all the time, but was too afraid for your safety to admit it.
After sharing your discovery with the tall, dark, handsome man, you did the very thing your father feared most; you went with the man to an abandoned house which the map said the pendant was hidden beneath.
It was very dark and more than a little unsettling in the basement of the house, but with such a broad shouldered man at your side, you felt quite fearless. You found the pendant almost right away, and were trudging back up the basement stairs, when a hand smacked your lantern out of your grasp and sent it crashing to the floor where the flames were extinguished. In the darkness you heard the distinct sound of two men struggling. A shot was fired, but no injuries were made by it, and the pistol went spinning across the floor. You picked it up, groped a bit in the black, called out to the tall man, listened very carefully to his shouting, aimed, fired, and hoped with all your heart that you hit the right man.
Well, I am very happy to say that you did hit the right man, and the tall one lived to see his brother's murderers sent off to prison. He sold the Midnight Secret to a museum which gave him plenty of money to support a wife by.
After you married the tall, dark, handsome, broad shouldered, entirely too gorgeous to be a real person except Richard Armitage or Gerard Butler man, you moved to a different part of India where your husband heard tales of a mysterious cave that was said to hold countless treasures to anyone brave enough to venture within...
But that's a whole 'nother story.
Rate it a 5! You know you loved it!
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