Sentences with phrase «unread posts»

It can be somewhat daunting to see (23) in the paras telling me that I have 23 unread posts, but I love that I CAN go back to those really old posts and not lose out.
For me, it always comes back to connectivity; it's not necessarily social media that's the problem (I'm not on Facebook, so there's half the battle), it's that I hate to see the unread posts count in my feed reader climb ever higher.
It always shows 0 unread posts, but there's a dozen or more on here.
No unread posts, Bless you, The Lord has good.

Not exact matches

In a post for Business Insider, the Hint Water founder says she's up at 5:30 a.m. «on the dot,» to look over her calendar, catch up on unread emails, and make sure nothing urgent has popped up over night.
In a nutshell, I shared the hesitations I've had to key a lengthy blog post, because it would go unread.
The best words are those unread... Frequency about 8 posts per week.
If your headline isn't irresistible, your post goes unread.
Also, while you're right to think that some of those free books are languishing on Kindles unread, some of them forever, that you received 77 new reviews from the promotion (plus 10 since you wrote this post) that means a lot of people did read it.
I supposed that those reviews went unread, or disappeared into the ether as soon as the reviewer hit «post».
If I go to individual posts, I can see there are unread ones, and I can post, but that option no longer works.
Likewise, the comment with Reed Young's name appearing in this blog's Kaufman article post links to an obscure, unread blog.
You could be an absolute expert in your particular field, but if your only means of showing that prowess online is through an unread blog post on a low - trafficked website... well then you're not getting all you could out of your effort.
During a busy work day, it can be hard to find time to read a blog post or an email, and if you're like many people you just find your Pocket filled with unread articles.
I want to read even more, but it gets overwhelming when I see my Google Reader overflowing with unread blog posts.
The best words are those unread... Frequency about 8 posts per week.
The Facebook Site Information may include, without limitation, the following information, to the extent visible on the Facebook Site: your name, your profile picture, your gender, your birthday, your hometown location (city / state / country), your current location (city / state / country), your political views, your activities, your interests, your musical preferences, television shows in which you are interested, movies in which you are interested, books in which you are interested, your favorite quotes, the text of your «About Me» section, your relationship status, your dating interests, your relationship interests, your summer plans, your Facebook user network affiliations, your education history, your work history, your course information, copies of photos in your Facebook Site photo albums, metadata associated with your Facebook Site photo albums (e.g., time of upload, album name, comments on your photos, etc.), the total number of messages sent and / or received by you, the total number of unread messages in your Facebook inbox, the total number of «pokes» you have sent and / or received, the total number of wall posts on your Wall, a list of user IDs mapped to your Facebook friends, your social timeline, and events associated with your Facebook profile.
My google reader is filled with 3,000 unread blog posts which induces heart palpitations — the google home page makes blog reading feel a little less daunting.
It takes me to the next unread blog post, added bonus, I get to hop to the site directly in one click instead of reading in a reader, then clicking over to comment.
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