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mouse

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mouse Enthusiast

What is a Trackback in Blogs? I am having enough problem trying to figure out how to post the Blogs. I wish there was a step by step list for the computer illiterate. Thanks, Armetta B)


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gf4life Enthusiast

I can't tell you what a trackback is. I was hoping someone here would know...

But I can tell you how to post in your blog. Once you set up your blog, then you can click on the "Add Entry" button in the top right hand box. Once you finish your entry, click on the "Post New Entry" box on the bottom of the page. Then you need to hit the "Publish" box on the bottom of that entry. And then you are done. (Edit: I found a new trick that I didn't know before. You can make your entry publish automatically by chooing the option to post as Published by the post new entry button. It saves a step in the process. :) )

If you don't publish the entry then it is considered to be a draft and no one else can view it but you.

God bless,

Mariann

mouse Enthusiast

Thank you Mariann for the Blog information. I need all the help I can get in that department. You said "once you set up your blog" and you must have been referring to all those little squares or questions or whatever they are. I had no idea what they meant and left them alone. I finally figured out how to publish, but that was after I had already done two entries. So my last Blog is the third. The one below that is the first and the one below that is the second. Talk about a bag over my brain. Now if someone would only let us know what a trackback is. Thanks again.

Armetta :(

Jonesy Apprentice

:unsure:

I think we all want to know what a trackback is: also permalink. I clicked on that for a couple of blogs, but don't know what it accomplished - don't know where the permalink is saved.

celiac3270, where are you? You young-uns seem to catch on so fast, I've been waiting for you to figure these things out.

Scott, where are you? Please don't leave us hanging out here with all these question marks fogging up our hazy brains.

;)

Maryellen

lbsteenwyk Explorer

I agree it would be very, very nice to have some instructions for those of us who are not familiar with blog terminology/procedures. An instruction guide that could be printed out would be great!!

jenvan Collaborator

Okay all, I went looking through cyber space for a trackback definition and here is what I found below... I guess the short of a trackback is that it allows you to reference or 'link' to a post or topic in another's blog. I think ! :blink:

Pingback lets you notify the author of an article if you link to his article(article on a blog, of course). If the links you include in an article you write on a blog lead to a blog which is pingback-enabled, then the author of that blog gets a notification in the form of a pingback that you linked to his article.

Trackback, on the other hand helps you to notify another author that you wrote something related to what he had written on his blog. So that the other author will sit up and notice that you gave him credit for something, or that you improved upon something he wrote, or something similar.

With pingback and trackback, blogs are interconnected.

Think of them as the equivalents of acknowledgements and references at the end of an academic paper, or a chapter in a textbook.

TrackBack is a type of peer-to-peer communication system that was designed to send notification of updates between two Web sites via a Trackback Ping. Ping in reference to TrackBack refers to a small message sent from one Web server to another. TrackBacks are useful for informing a Web site that you have referenced its Web site within your own Web site, and is popular with bloggers.

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    • Scott Adams
      This is a very common question, and the most important thing to know is that no, Guinness is not considered safe for individuals with coeliac disease. While it's fascinating to hear anecdotes from other coeliacs who can drink it without immediate issues, this is a risky exception rather than the rule. The core issue is that Guinness is brewed from barley, which contains gluten, and the standard brewing process does not remove the gluten protein to a level safe for coeliacs (below 20ppm). For someone like you who experiences dermatitis herpetiformis, the reaction is particularly significant. DH is triggered by gluten ingestion, even without immediate gastrointestinal symptoms. So, while you may not feel an instant stomach upset, drinking a gluten-containing beer like Guinness could very well provoke a flare-up of your skin condition days later. It would be a gamble with a potentially uncomfortable and long-lasting consequence. Fortunately, there are excellent, certified gluten-free stouts available now that can provide a safe and satisfying alternative without the risk.
    • MogwaiStripe
      Interestingly, this thought occurred to me last night. I did find that there are studies investigating whether vitamin D deficiency can actually trigger celiac disease.  Source: National Institutes of Health https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7231074/ 
    • Butch68
      Before being diagnosed coeliac I used to love Guinness. Being made from barley it should be something a coeliac shouldn’t drink. But taking to another coeliac and they can drink it with no ill effects and have heard of others who can drink it too.  is this everyone’s experience?  Can I drink it?  I get dermatitis herpetiformis and don’t get instant reactions to gluten so can’t try it to see for myself. 
    • trents
      NCGS does not cause damage to the small bowel villi so, if indeed you were not skimping on gluten when you had the antibody blood testing done, it is likely you have celiac disease.
    • Scott Adams
      I will assume you did the gluten challenge properly and were eating a lot of gluten daily for 6-8 weeks before your test, but if not, that could be the issue. You can still have celiac disease with negative blood test results, although it's not as common:  Clinical and genetic profile of patients with seronegative coeliac disease: the natural history and response to gluten-free diet: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5606118/  Seronegative Celiac Disease - A Challenging Case: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9441776/  Enteropathies with villous atrophy but negative coeliac serology in adults: current issues: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34764141/  Approximately 10x more people have non-celiac gluten sensitivity than have celiac disease, but there isn’t yet a test for NCGS. If your symptoms go away on a gluten-free diet it would likely signal NCGS.
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