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Microsoft Access Team Blog

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New Access fan page on Facebook

In our never-ending quest to spread the word about Microsoft Access, we now have an official fan page on Facebook! Our news feed includes links to articles on MSDN, TechNet, and Office Online, as well as posts on this blog. You can choose to see our posts in your Facebook news feed automatically, or read them only when you want to. Similarly, if you post something on the fan page, you can choose to be notified whenever someone responds to you.

Here’s a quick walkthrough of how the Microsoft Access fan page on Facebook works:

Join the Access fan page

If you already have a Facebook account, sign in, and then follow these simple steps:

  1. Visit http://www.facebook.com/pages/Microsoft-Access/102823256361.
  2. Near the top of the page, click the Become a Fan button.

    image

Browse through Access wall posts

Once you’ve joined the Microsoft Access fan page on Facebook, you can begin browsing for posts right away.

To switch the default view to the page wall, click the Wall tab on the top navigation bar near the Access logo:

image

You can now see all of the wall posts by the administrator and by other Access users just like you. Wall posts are shown in chronological order and the newest posts appear near the top of the page.

Join the conversation! Reply to an existing wall post that interests you, or make your own post to start a new discussion or to share something with the other members.

Hide automatic Access fan page updates

Depending on when you join the Access fan page, you’ll probably see automatic updates in your Facebook news feed within a few days. If you like seeing these updates, you don’t need to do anything else. Check out the ones that sound interesting and ignore the ones that you don’t care about on any particular day.

If you don’t want automatic Access fan page updates to appear in your news feed, you can easily disable them by following these steps:

  1. While signed in to your Facebook account, go to the Facebook home page at http://www.facebook.com/.
  2. Scroll through your Facebook news feed (the center column of your home page) and find any one of the Access fan page updates that have appeared.
  3. Move the mouse pointer over the Access post until you see a Hide link show up near the right side of the post.
  4. When you move the mouse pointer over the Hide link, it becomes a button. Click it.
  5. On the mini-menu that appears below the Hide button, click Hide Microsoft Access.

Facebook will briefly display a yellow confirmation box, informing you that Access updates will now be hidden from view.

Tip  While Access fan page updates are hidden from view in your Facebook news feed, you can still visit the Microsoft Access fan page at any time by entering Microsoft Access into the Search box near the top of any Facebook page and then clicking the search result. It’s a fast way to return to the fan page whenever you want to check for updates on your own.

Restore hidden Access fan page updates

If you previously disabled Access fan page updates from your Facebook news feed and you’ve changed your mind about seeing automatic updates, you can easily restore them by following these steps:

    1. While signed in to your Facebook account, go to the Facebook home page at http://www.facebook.com/.
    2. Scroll to the very end of your Facebook news feed (the center column of your home page) until you see the navigation bar in the page footer:
      The bottom navigation bar in the Facebook stream
    3. Click the Edit Options link.
    4. Near the top of the Hidden from News Feed popup dialog box, click the Pages link.
    5. Scroll down until you see Microsoft Access, and then click the Add to News Feed button.

When you have completed these steps, you will once again see automatic Microsoft Access fan page notifications in your Facebook news feed.

Share what you know!

Post to the wall! It’s just a conversation with like-minded people who enjoy and rely on Access in similar ways as you.

Posted: Monday, October 12, 2009 6:38 AM by cdowns

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