![]() ![]() TikTok video from Andrea Álvarez "Dibujos animados que tus #hijos jamás deberían ver! Parte 2. #consejos #consejosdevida #consejosparapadres #consejosparamamás #consejosdecrianza #crianza #amor #familia #dibujosanimados #educacionġ.2M Likes, 42.8K Comments. Te prometo que estará mejor educado coloreando que viendo contenido en internet. ![]() Por eso procura pasar el mayor tiempo con hijos y lejos de las pantallas, ponles a hacer otras actividades en lugar de darle un celular, pc, tablet o el tv. Siempre soy enfática en decirle a los padres de familia que tengan cuidado con lo que dejan ver a sus niños! Hay mucho contenido suelto en internet y no solo en la TV por cable, sino en las distintas plataformas donde los niños tienen acceso sin restricción. When in doubt, check the destination of that short URL before clicking.Dibujos animados que tus #hijos jamás deberían ver! Parte 2. But winding up with malware on your system (or an unfriendly visit from HR) is worse. Worrying about where a shortened URL is going to take you is a hassle, to be sure. Twitter client coders, please build in this option! And if you know of a client that supports the functionality please leave a comment and share. I'm not familiar with every single Twitter client out there, but so far I haven't found one that will preview the destination of a short URL. The LongURL website is also valuable for those of us who use a client to access Twitter. LongURL says it supports ", is.gd, ping.fm, ur1.ca, bit.ly,, ,, url.ie, x.se,, yep.it,, and more!" No more surprises! If you don't use Firefox, there is also a LongURL website that can accomplish the same thing with a few more steps (copying and pasting the short URL). Once it is installed, you can hover your mouse cursor over a shortened URL and LongURL will pop up the real destination of the link. A better solution, for Firefox users at least, is to install the LongURL add-on. So what to do? Do we just refuse to click on shortened URLs? That definitely protects us but it also limits the usefulness of Twitter and other web services. Instead of a rick roll you might find a shortened URL unexpectedly directing you to a malware site or other unsavory and career threatening destination. Ha! Joke's on him.Īnd of course that which can be used for dumb jokes can be used for evil. He'd eagerly click the link, hoping to save the few strands of hair he had left, and instead of finding regexp clarity, suddenly he'd be on YouTube and Rick Astley's "Never Gonna Give You Up" would be blaring from his speakers, attracting the attention and ire of an entire hectare of cubicle farm. You'd send a friend at the office a shortened URL saying it went to a great regular expressions tutorial. The ridiculous "rick roll" trend of a few months back used this to great advantage. There's a danger to short URLs though: you don't know where they go. When you have 140 characters to work with, shortening a URL is crucial. The biggest value in shortening URLs is when character space is limited, Twitter being an obvious example. You also might argue that you're not often asked to type in a URL anyway, and I'd agree with you there, too. Now you might argue that the longer, human readable URL is actually easier to use than the shortened URL, which is just a bunch of random characters, and I'd agree with you. You paste in a lengthy, search engine friendly URL and get out a short but nonsensical URL. And then so we can track the source of our traffic, we add some query strings (?utm_source=foo&utm_medium=bar) and we wind up with a long cumbersome URL that's great for machines but arguably not so great for people.Įnter a variety of shortened URL services (,, , etc). Where we used to use /article/1234 we now use /books/reviews/fiction/fantasy/the_lord_of_the_rings so that search engines can mine the URL for relevance. Part of this is due to domain names getting longer, and a lot of it is due to SEO (search engine optimization) changes. URLs seem to grow longer and longer every year. ![]()
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