How To Understand Binary Options Daily
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You can make circles, give them names. Put people you know into a circle. Put them in several circles to help you organize. You can put people you don't know into circles to 'follow' them and see their public posts on your "Stream" (we'll get to the Stream in a bit). For those of you familiar with Twitter, you'll already understand this concept. Circles allow you a lot of freedom, and as the video above shows, you can also decide to see posts in your Stream that are only from people in a chosen circle. This means that you don't have to spend ages scrolling down the screen, clicking "More" because there have been 589 new posts since you logged in last night, all on the same Feed. Once you've tried it, you'll wonder why this isn't the norm everywhere.Here's the other great thing with Circles.
Not only can you use them to determine which people's posts you view on your Stream, but you can post your own message specifically to the people of one, or more circles. This gives us a whole new level of control over how we share information with one another. For instance, I follow a person who has a circle that contains people who are crazy about cats. That way, she can share her love of cats with people that are interested in cats, without overwhelming all of her contacts with cat posts that they don't want to see.
