Come pubblicare commenti audio e messaggi vocali su Facebook

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Come pubblicare commenti audio e messaggi vocali su Facebook

Utilizzando l’applicazione Facebook Messenger oltre a poter chattare con i propri amici è anche possibile, al pari di WhatsApp, effettuare registrazioni vocali e quindi inviare messaggi audio agli altri utenti. Questa possibilità, però, non viene offerta anche su Facebook.

Per rimediare e quindi per pubblicare commenti audio e messaggi vocali su Facebook è tuttavia possibile ricorrere all’utilizzo di un’apposita estensione per Google Chrome.

Pubblicare commenti audio e messaggi vocali su Facebook con Talk and Comment

Grazie all’estensione Talk and Comment specifica per il browser web di big G è possibile inviare messaggi audio e postare commenti vocali su Facebook.

Una volta installata, l’estensione richiede il permesso per utilizzare il microfono del computer, indispensabile per poter usufruire delle funzionalità offerte. Per far ciò e quindi per pubblicare commenti audio e messaggi vocali su Facebook grazie a Talk and Comment è necessario fare click su Consenti quando viene richiesto.

Fatto ciò viene visualizzato un pulsante a forma di microfono nel campo dei commenti sotto qualsiasi messaggio su Facebook e all’interno della chat.

Per postare un messaggio o un commento audio su Facebook basta quindi:

  1. Fare click sull’icona a forma di microfono e tenere premuto sino a quando diventa di colore rosso.
  2. Parlare normalmente.
  3. Rilasciare il pulsante di registrazione per caricare il messaggio vocale.

L’estensione restituisce un URL che si trasforma in un messaggio vocale riproducibile una volta inviato.

Da notare che non c’è alcun limite alla durata di ogni registrazione audio e che tutti i destinatari possono riprodurre i commenti audio e i messaggi vocali a prescindere dal fatto che venga utilizzata l’estensione.

1.091.912 commenti su “Come pubblicare commenti audio e messaggi vocali su Facebook”

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  2. America will hold talks with Iran next week over its nuclear programme, President Donald Trump has revealed.

    It comes days after the US bombed Iranian nuclear facilities, although there were conflicting
    reports over whether they were completely destroyed.

    ‘We’re going to talk to them next week, with Iran. We may
    sign an agreement. I don’t know. To me, I don’t think it’s that
    necessary,’ the US President said.

    In response to Western accusations that Iran has been enriching uranium
    to near-weapons-grade purity, he said: ‘I’ll tell you, the last thing they
    want to do is enrich anything right now. They want to recover.’

    Trump said he did not believe that Iran would engage with its nuclear weapons development again. Tehran have always said they are not building nuclear arms.  
    No further details were shared about the location or the participants but Trump felt
    assured that Iran would follow a diplomatic path to reconciliation.

    ‘We’ll end up having something of a relationship with Iran,’ he mused but insisted that he would not
    let them rebuild their nuclear programme.

    ‘I don’t care if I have an agreement or not,’ he said.

    ‘The the only thing we would be asking for is what we were asking for before
    … I said Iran will not have no nuclear.’ 

    President Donald Trump has said he is holding talks with Iran next week over its
    nuclear programme and potentially sign an agreement

    ‘We’ll end up having something of a relationship with
    Iran,’ Trump said but insisted that he would not let them rebuild their nuclear programme (pictured: Supreme Leader
    Ayatollah Ali Khamenei)

    A satellite image shows the Natanz nuclear facility in Iran after the US airstrike

    In this image provided by the White House, President Donald Trump
    and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, right, sit in the Situation Room at the White House in Washington

    ‘It’s blown up – to kingdom come. And, so I don’t feel very strongly about it,’ he added.

    Trump credited the US bombings with bringing a swift end to the 12-day
    conflict between Iran and Israel, calling it ‘a victory for everybody’.

    Over the weekend, Trump authorised the U.S. military to use B-2 bomber planes to drop 30,000 ‘bunker
    busters’ to ‘obliterate’ Iran’s three largest nuclear sites.

    ‘It was very severe. It was obliteration,’ he said.

    Despite Trump’s insistence that the nuclear programme was destroyed, the U.S.
    Defence Intelligence Agency has said the bombing would have only set Tehran back a few months.

    In a leaked initial assessment published by CNN and the
    New York Times, it was suggested the damage from the bombings was limited and Iran may have moved much of its enriched uranium out ahead of
    the attack.

    However, the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency has since backed the White House on their assessment of the damage.

    Director John Ratcliff confirmed the facilities were ‘severely
    damaged’ and had a ‘body of credible evidence’ to believe the sites would
    take years to rebuild, with several destroyed.

    The Fordow nuclear enrichment site, 80 miles south of Tehran, was flattened

    Your browser does not support iframes.

    B-2 Stealth Bombers were used in the attack to drop bunker buster bombs

    Residents evacuate from an impacted site after a missile attack from Iran

    Fordow before it was ‘obliterated’ by Trump

    Mr Ratcliff stopped short of confirming the entire program was destroyed. 

    Israel’s nuclear agency have also said the strikes will ‘set back Iran’s ability to develop nuclear weapons by many years’. 

    The White House has said the initial assessment was ‘flat-out
    wrong’ and was a ‘clear attempt to demean’ Trump’s authority.

    White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, posted to social media: ‘This alleged “assessment” is flat-out wrong and was classified
    as “top secre” but was still leaked to CNN by an anonymous, low-level loser in the intelligence community.

    ‘The leaking of this alleged assessment is a clear attempt to demean President Trump, and discredit
    the brave fighter pilots who conducted a perfectly executed mission to obliterate Iran’s nuclear program.

    ‘Everyone knows what happens when you drop fourteen 30,000 pound bombs perfectly on their targets:
    total obliteration.’

    In a shocking exchange with reporters earlier this week, Trump swore on camera after
    Iran and Israel broke their temporary ceasefire he said he had orchestrated.

    ‘We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long
    and so hard that they don’t know what the f*** they’re doing,’ Trump
    said outside the White House on his way to the NATO summit this week.

    Destruction seen in Tehran Monday in the aftermath of an Israeli strike.
    President Donald Trump announced a ceasefire Monday night that was
    supposed to take hold Tuesday morning, but Iran and Israel traded several more rounds in its aftermath 

    Workers clean up debris near a building in Beersheba, Israel where
    four people were killed by an Iranian missile strike. According to Israeli authorities, Iran launched a barrage of
    missiles in the early hours Tuesday including several missiles
    after the ceasefire was to take place

    President Donald Trump appeared to like being called ‘daddy’
    as he was referred to at Wednesday’s Nato Summit in the Hague by Secretary General Mark Rutte

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio (right) giggles behind President Donald Trump as he answered questions about being called ‘daddy’

    Nato chief Mark Rutte said on Wednesday during
    a meeting of the defence bloc in the Hague that ‘Daddy has to use strong language’ to
    get Israel and Iran to sort things out, to which Trump agreed. 

    Mr Rutte has since been forced to backtrack on his embarrassing
    remark which raised eyebrows across the world. 

    The former Dutch Prime Minister said yesterday: ‘The daddy thing, I didn’t
    call [Trump] daddy, what I said, is that sometimes…
    In Europe, I hear sometimes countries saying, “hey, Mark, will the US stay with us?”

    ‘And I said, “that sounds a little bit like a small child asking his daddy, ‘hey, are you still staying with the family'”?
    So in that sense, I use daddy, not that I was calling President Trump
    daddy.’  

    The White House earlier today posted a provocative music video to Usher’s hit ‘Hey Daddy (Daddy’s
    Home)’ to mark Trump’s return from the NATO summit.

    In the video, Trump steps off the plane
    to crowds lining the streets to catch a glimpse of him as the lyrics ‘Daddy’s home, home for
    me / And I know you’ve been waiting for this loving all
    day / You know your daddy’s home and it’s time to play.’

    The music video features snippets of Trump’s meetings at
    NATO, including with Rutte. Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth also
    features in the video.

    In another section, as Trump is formally introducing himself to officials and working the crowd,
    Usher sings ‘Hey, hey, hey Daddy.’

    The White House has celebrated President Donald Trump ‘s return from the NATO summit with a provocative music video to
    Usher’s hit ‘Hey Daddy (Daddy’s Home).’

    The music video features snippets of Trump’s meetings at NATO,
    including with Rutte

    Earlier this week, it was revealed Iranian officials are said to be considering removing their
    supreme leader from power after America’s bombing.

    Two sources involved in talks told The Atlantic that officials
    are now contemplating deposing Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, but said it’s
    just ‘one idea’ among many ‘plots’.

    ‘Everybody knows Khamenei’s days are numbered,’ one official told
    the American outlet. ‘Even if he stays in office, he won’t
    have actual power.’

    Iranian officials had sought to displace the 86-year-old supreme leader even before the U.S.
    intervention due to his age and longstanding health concerns,
    the sources said.

    IsraelNATOIran

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