Technical.ly
🗞️ Reporting on the local effects of tech, startups & jobs of the future
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Emilia Doda read about a data center being proposed across from her childhood home in Scranton, PA, which raised questions about the data center wave in the state. She then went on to create the Pennsylvania Data Center Proposal Tracker, an interactive tool that tracks existing, proposed and delayed data centers across the state.
Swipe through to learn more about Emilia, the tracker and her hopes growing it nation-wide.
🔗 Read the full article in the link in our bio
📝: Hannah Frances Johansson

Emilia Doda read about a data center being proposed across from her childhood home in Scranton, PA, which raised questions about the data center wave in the state. She then went on to create the Pennsylvania Data Center Proposal Tracker, an interactive tool that tracks existing, proposed and delayed data centers across the state.
Swipe through to learn more about Emilia, the tracker and her hopes growing it nation-wide.
🔗 Read the full article in the link in our bio
📝: Hannah Frances Johansson

Emilia Doda read about a data center being proposed across from her childhood home in Scranton, PA, which raised questions about the data center wave in the state. She then went on to create the Pennsylvania Data Center Proposal Tracker, an interactive tool that tracks existing, proposed and delayed data centers across the state.
Swipe through to learn more about Emilia, the tracker and her hopes growing it nation-wide.
🔗 Read the full article in the link in our bio
📝: Hannah Frances Johansson

Emilia Doda read about a data center being proposed across from her childhood home in Scranton, PA, which raised questions about the data center wave in the state. She then went on to create the Pennsylvania Data Center Proposal Tracker, an interactive tool that tracks existing, proposed and delayed data centers across the state.
Swipe through to learn more about Emilia, the tracker and her hopes growing it nation-wide.
🔗 Read the full article in the link in our bio
📝: Hannah Frances Johansson

Emilia Doda read about a data center being proposed across from her childhood home in Scranton, PA, which raised questions about the data center wave in the state. She then went on to create the Pennsylvania Data Center Proposal Tracker, an interactive tool that tracks existing, proposed and delayed data centers across the state.
Swipe through to learn more about Emilia, the tracker and her hopes growing it nation-wide.
🔗 Read the full article in the link in our bio
📝: Hannah Frances Johansson

Should data center revenue help fund education? This US Senate candidate thinks so.
Independent Senate candidate Mark Moran is proposing a 2% tax on data center’s revenue to help pay fund American’s education.
If he’s elected, the McLean native and former FBoy Island reality TV star said he intends to push for the fee on gross revenue from data center operations instead of profit like other corporate taxes. Plus, he said he’d charge companies for human workers displaced by an AI system, though it’s unclear how that would be calculated.
🔗 Read the full Q&A in the link in our bio
📝: Kaela Roeder

Should data center revenue help fund education? This US Senate candidate thinks so.
Independent Senate candidate Mark Moran is proposing a 2% tax on data center’s revenue to help pay fund American’s education.
If he’s elected, the McLean native and former FBoy Island reality TV star said he intends to push for the fee on gross revenue from data center operations instead of profit like other corporate taxes. Plus, he said he’d charge companies for human workers displaced by an AI system, though it’s unclear how that would be calculated.
🔗 Read the full Q&A in the link in our bio
📝: Kaela Roeder

Should data center revenue help fund education? This US Senate candidate thinks so.
Independent Senate candidate Mark Moran is proposing a 2% tax on data center’s revenue to help pay fund American’s education.
If he’s elected, the McLean native and former FBoy Island reality TV star said he intends to push for the fee on gross revenue from data center operations instead of profit like other corporate taxes. Plus, he said he’d charge companies for human workers displaced by an AI system, though it’s unclear how that would be calculated.
🔗 Read the full Q&A in the link in our bio
📝: Kaela Roeder

Should data center revenue help fund education? This US Senate candidate thinks so.
Independent Senate candidate Mark Moran is proposing a 2% tax on data center’s revenue to help pay fund American’s education.
If he’s elected, the McLean native and former FBoy Island reality TV star said he intends to push for the fee on gross revenue from data center operations instead of profit like other corporate taxes. Plus, he said he’d charge companies for human workers displaced by an AI system, though it’s unclear how that would be calculated.
🔗 Read the full Q&A in the link in our bio
📝: Kaela Roeder

Should data center revenue help fund education? This US Senate candidate thinks so.
Independent Senate candidate Mark Moran is proposing a 2% tax on data center’s revenue to help pay fund American’s education.
If he’s elected, the McLean native and former FBoy Island reality TV star said he intends to push for the fee on gross revenue from data center operations instead of profit like other corporate taxes. Plus, he said he’d charge companies for human workers displaced by an AI system, though it’s unclear how that would be calculated.
🔗 Read the full Q&A in the link in our bio
📝: Kaela Roeder

Should data center revenue help fund education? This US Senate candidate thinks so.
Independent Senate candidate Mark Moran is proposing a 2% tax on data center’s revenue to help pay fund American’s education.
If he’s elected, the McLean native and former FBoy Island reality TV star said he intends to push for the fee on gross revenue from data center operations instead of profit like other corporate taxes. Plus, he said he’d charge companies for human workers displaced by an AI system, though it’s unclear how that would be calculated.
🔗 Read the full Q&A in the link in our bio
📝: Kaela Roeder

Should data center revenue help fund education? This US Senate candidate thinks so.
Independent Senate candidate Mark Moran is proposing a 2% tax on data center’s revenue to help pay fund American’s education.
If he’s elected, the McLean native and former FBoy Island reality TV star said he intends to push for the fee on gross revenue from data center operations instead of profit like other corporate taxes. Plus, he said he’d charge companies for human workers displaced by an AI system, though it’s unclear how that would be calculated.
🔗 Read the full Q&A in the link in our bio
📝: Kaela Roeder

How do Philadelphia poll workers troubleshoot election tech?
Human support and backup plans to keep city voting machines, e-pollbooks and scanners running smoothly.
Read the full story in Spanish and English through the link in our bio.
—
“Behind the Ballot” is a collaborative reporting project from Technical.ly and the Bucks County Beacon investigating the people, technology and systems behind election administration in Bucks County ahead of the 2026 midterms. The series examines what safeguards exist, how they are implemented and what voters can verify for themselves, with support from the Fund for Investigative Journalism and the Philadelphia Journalism Collaborative. Translation into Spanish is via a PJC partnership with 2PuntosPlatform.
📝Sarah Huffman and Katie Malone | Edited by Danya Henninger
🎨@fernanda_2098

How do Philadelphia poll workers troubleshoot election tech?
Human support and backup plans to keep city voting machines, e-pollbooks and scanners running smoothly.
Read the full story in Spanish and English through the link in our bio.
—
“Behind the Ballot” is a collaborative reporting project from Technical.ly and the Bucks County Beacon investigating the people, technology and systems behind election administration in Bucks County ahead of the 2026 midterms. The series examines what safeguards exist, how they are implemented and what voters can verify for themselves, with support from the Fund for Investigative Journalism and the Philadelphia Journalism Collaborative. Translation into Spanish is via a PJC partnership with 2PuntosPlatform.
📝Sarah Huffman and Katie Malone | Edited by Danya Henninger
🎨@fernanda_2098

How do Philadelphia poll workers troubleshoot election tech?
Human support and backup plans to keep city voting machines, e-pollbooks and scanners running smoothly.
Read the full story in Spanish and English through the link in our bio.
—
“Behind the Ballot” is a collaborative reporting project from Technical.ly and the Bucks County Beacon investigating the people, technology and systems behind election administration in Bucks County ahead of the 2026 midterms. The series examines what safeguards exist, how they are implemented and what voters can verify for themselves, with support from the Fund for Investigative Journalism and the Philadelphia Journalism Collaborative. Translation into Spanish is via a PJC partnership with 2PuntosPlatform.
📝Sarah Huffman and Katie Malone | Edited by Danya Henninger
🎨@fernanda_2098

How do Philadelphia poll workers troubleshoot election tech?
Human support and backup plans to keep city voting machines, e-pollbooks and scanners running smoothly.
Read the full story in Spanish and English through the link in our bio.
—
“Behind the Ballot” is a collaborative reporting project from Technical.ly and the Bucks County Beacon investigating the people, technology and systems behind election administration in Bucks County ahead of the 2026 midterms. The series examines what safeguards exist, how they are implemented and what voters can verify for themselves, with support from the Fund for Investigative Journalism and the Philadelphia Journalism Collaborative. Translation into Spanish is via a PJC partnership with 2PuntosPlatform.
📝Sarah Huffman and Katie Malone | Edited by Danya Henninger
🎨@fernanda_2098

How do Philadelphia poll workers troubleshoot election tech?
Human support and backup plans to keep city voting machines, e-pollbooks and scanners running smoothly.
Read the full story in Spanish and English through the link in our bio.
—
“Behind the Ballot” is a collaborative reporting project from Technical.ly and the Bucks County Beacon investigating the people, technology and systems behind election administration in Bucks County ahead of the 2026 midterms. The series examines what safeguards exist, how they are implemented and what voters can verify for themselves, with support from the Fund for Investigative Journalism and the Philadelphia Journalism Collaborative. Translation into Spanish is via a PJC partnership with 2PuntosPlatform.
📝Sarah Huffman and Katie Malone | Edited by Danya Henninger
🎨@fernanda_2098

How do Philadelphia poll workers troubleshoot election tech?
Human support and backup plans to keep city voting machines, e-pollbooks and scanners running smoothly.
Read the full story in Spanish and English through the link in our bio.
—
“Behind the Ballot” is a collaborative reporting project from Technical.ly and the Bucks County Beacon investigating the people, technology and systems behind election administration in Bucks County ahead of the 2026 midterms. The series examines what safeguards exist, how they are implemented and what voters can verify for themselves, with support from the Fund for Investigative Journalism and the Philadelphia Journalism Collaborative. Translation into Spanish is via a PJC partnership with 2PuntosPlatform.
📝Sarah Huffman and Katie Malone | Edited by Danya Henninger
🎨@fernanda_2098

How do Philadelphia poll workers troubleshoot election tech?
Human support and backup plans to keep city voting machines, e-pollbooks and scanners running smoothly.
Read the full story in Spanish and English through the link in our bio.
—
“Behind the Ballot” is a collaborative reporting project from Technical.ly and the Bucks County Beacon investigating the people, technology and systems behind election administration in Bucks County ahead of the 2026 midterms. The series examines what safeguards exist, how they are implemented and what voters can verify for themselves, with support from the Fund for Investigative Journalism and the Philadelphia Journalism Collaborative. Translation into Spanish is via a PJC partnership with 2PuntosPlatform.
📝Sarah Huffman and Katie Malone | Edited by Danya Henninger
🎨@fernanda_2098
Elon Musk told companies to leave Delaware. Turns out they didn’t listen.
It was all over the news, but we crunched the numbers and the “DExit” narrative was not only overblown, it was wrong.
We looked at 20 years of Census data. In 2024 — the year of all those DExit headlines — Delaware actually captured a larger share of new US business applications than the year before.
🔗 Read the full breakdown at link in bio
🎥: Holly Quinn

The technology voters don’t see is often what keeps polling places running.
In Philadelphia, poll worker training focuses on preventing technical issues from becoming voting access problems. That includes learning how to use voting machines, electronic poll books, hotlines and backup equipment when something goes wrong.
While election security safeguards are often invisible to voters, poll workers and machine inspectors play a key role in troubleshooting problems, keeping lines moving and helping voters cast their ballots without unnecessary delays.
This story was reported as part of a collaboration with @buckscountybeacon supported by the Fund for Investigative Journalism and @phljournocollab Thank you to @2puntosplatform for translating the article.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman

The technology voters don’t see is often what keeps polling places running.
In Philadelphia, poll worker training focuses on preventing technical issues from becoming voting access problems. That includes learning how to use voting machines, electronic poll books, hotlines and backup equipment when something goes wrong.
While election security safeguards are often invisible to voters, poll workers and machine inspectors play a key role in troubleshooting problems, keeping lines moving and helping voters cast their ballots without unnecessary delays.
This story was reported as part of a collaboration with @buckscountybeacon supported by the Fund for Investigative Journalism and @phljournocollab Thank you to @2puntosplatform for translating the article.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman

The technology voters don’t see is often what keeps polling places running.
In Philadelphia, poll worker training focuses on preventing technical issues from becoming voting access problems. That includes learning how to use voting machines, electronic poll books, hotlines and backup equipment when something goes wrong.
While election security safeguards are often invisible to voters, poll workers and machine inspectors play a key role in troubleshooting problems, keeping lines moving and helping voters cast their ballots without unnecessary delays.
This story was reported as part of a collaboration with @buckscountybeacon supported by the Fund for Investigative Journalism and @phljournocollab Thank you to @2puntosplatform for translating the article.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman

The technology voters don’t see is often what keeps polling places running.
In Philadelphia, poll worker training focuses on preventing technical issues from becoming voting access problems. That includes learning how to use voting machines, electronic poll books, hotlines and backup equipment when something goes wrong.
While election security safeguards are often invisible to voters, poll workers and machine inspectors play a key role in troubleshooting problems, keeping lines moving and helping voters cast their ballots without unnecessary delays.
This story was reported as part of a collaboration with @buckscountybeacon supported by the Fund for Investigative Journalism and @phljournocollab Thank you to @2puntosplatform for translating the article.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman

The technology voters don’t see is often what keeps polling places running.
In Philadelphia, poll worker training focuses on preventing technical issues from becoming voting access problems. That includes learning how to use voting machines, electronic poll books, hotlines and backup equipment when something goes wrong.
While election security safeguards are often invisible to voters, poll workers and machine inspectors play a key role in troubleshooting problems, keeping lines moving and helping voters cast their ballots without unnecessary delays.
This story was reported as part of a collaboration with @buckscountybeacon supported by the Fund for Investigative Journalism and @phljournocollab Thank you to @2puntosplatform for translating the article.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman

The technology voters don’t see is often what keeps polling places running.
In Philadelphia, poll worker training focuses on preventing technical issues from becoming voting access problems. That includes learning how to use voting machines, electronic poll books, hotlines and backup equipment when something goes wrong.
While election security safeguards are often invisible to voters, poll workers and machine inspectors play a key role in troubleshooting problems, keeping lines moving and helping voters cast their ballots without unnecessary delays.
This story was reported as part of a collaboration with @buckscountybeacon supported by the Fund for Investigative Journalism and @phljournocollab Thank you to @2puntosplatform for translating the article.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman

The technology voters don’t see is often what keeps polling places running.
In Philadelphia, poll worker training focuses on preventing technical issues from becoming voting access problems. That includes learning how to use voting machines, electronic poll books, hotlines and backup equipment when something goes wrong.
While election security safeguards are often invisible to voters, poll workers and machine inspectors play a key role in troubleshooting problems, keeping lines moving and helping voters cast their ballots without unnecessary delays.
This story was reported as part of a collaboration with @buckscountybeacon supported by the Fund for Investigative Journalism and @phljournocollab Thank you to @2puntosplatform for translating the article.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman

The technology voters don’t see is often what keeps polling places running.
In Philadelphia, poll worker training focuses on preventing technical issues from becoming voting access problems. That includes learning how to use voting machines, electronic poll books, hotlines and backup equipment when something goes wrong.
While election security safeguards are often invisible to voters, poll workers and machine inspectors play a key role in troubleshooting problems, keeping lines moving and helping voters cast their ballots without unnecessary delays.
This story was reported as part of a collaboration with @buckscountybeacon supported by the Fund for Investigative Journalism and @phljournocollab Thank you to @2puntosplatform for translating the article.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman
SBIR funding is back! But there are a bunch of changes.
Companies can get amounts ranging from $50k to nearly $2M. And promising startups can access up to $30M to bridge the “valley of death” (though that money used to go toward university research).
International ties are now under big scrutiny, especially with Russia, China and Iran. There’s tighter screening, some of it coordinated with intelligence agencies. And starting next year, there’s a crackdown on “SBIR mills” — where one company floods the application process.
Experts say there may be delays getting the program fully back up and running, since there’s already a backlog and less staff. If you’re applying for SBIR funding, tell us how it’s going, and read more at link in bio.
🎥: @kaelacoverstech

Waymo was a no-show at Philly’s City Council hearing discussing its oversight. And its written statement didn’t clarify much.
City Council hosted a session which included city officials, local academics, ride share drivers and community members. The session discussed topics like autonomous vehicle regulations, guidelines and the possible impact on transportation workers
Waymo offered a written testimony addressing some issue, but it wasn’t read aloud nor published online, leaving many at the hearing with unanswered questions.
The company began piloting the self-driving vehicles in Philadelphia last summer and announced in December that it would eventually be fully launching in the city. Residents have since had mixed feelings about the autonomous vehicles in the city.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman

Waymo was a no-show at Philly’s City Council hearing discussing its oversight. And its written statement didn’t clarify much.
City Council hosted a session which included city officials, local academics, ride share drivers and community members. The session discussed topics like autonomous vehicle regulations, guidelines and the possible impact on transportation workers
Waymo offered a written testimony addressing some issue, but it wasn’t read aloud nor published online, leaving many at the hearing with unanswered questions.
The company began piloting the self-driving vehicles in Philadelphia last summer and announced in December that it would eventually be fully launching in the city. Residents have since had mixed feelings about the autonomous vehicles in the city.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman

Waymo was a no-show at Philly’s City Council hearing discussing its oversight. And its written statement didn’t clarify much.
City Council hosted a session which included city officials, local academics, ride share drivers and community members. The session discussed topics like autonomous vehicle regulations, guidelines and the possible impact on transportation workers
Waymo offered a written testimony addressing some issue, but it wasn’t read aloud nor published online, leaving many at the hearing with unanswered questions.
The company began piloting the self-driving vehicles in Philadelphia last summer and announced in December that it would eventually be fully launching in the city. Residents have since had mixed feelings about the autonomous vehicles in the city.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman

Waymo was a no-show at Philly’s City Council hearing discussing its oversight. And its written statement didn’t clarify much.
City Council hosted a session which included city officials, local academics, ride share drivers and community members. The session discussed topics like autonomous vehicle regulations, guidelines and the possible impact on transportation workers
Waymo offered a written testimony addressing some issue, but it wasn’t read aloud nor published online, leaving many at the hearing with unanswered questions.
The company began piloting the self-driving vehicles in Philadelphia last summer and announced in December that it would eventually be fully launching in the city. Residents have since had mixed feelings about the autonomous vehicles in the city.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman

Waymo was a no-show at Philly’s City Council hearing discussing its oversight. And its written statement didn’t clarify much.
City Council hosted a session which included city officials, local academics, ride share drivers and community members. The session discussed topics like autonomous vehicle regulations, guidelines and the possible impact on transportation workers
Waymo offered a written testimony addressing some issue, but it wasn’t read aloud nor published online, leaving many at the hearing with unanswered questions.
The company began piloting the self-driving vehicles in Philadelphia last summer and announced in December that it would eventually be fully launching in the city. Residents have since had mixed feelings about the autonomous vehicles in the city.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman

Waymo was a no-show at Philly’s City Council hearing discussing its oversight. And its written statement didn’t clarify much.
City Council hosted a session which included city officials, local academics, ride share drivers and community members. The session discussed topics like autonomous vehicle regulations, guidelines and the possible impact on transportation workers
Waymo offered a written testimony addressing some issue, but it wasn’t read aloud nor published online, leaving many at the hearing with unanswered questions.
The company began piloting the self-driving vehicles in Philadelphia last summer and announced in December that it would eventually be fully launching in the city. Residents have since had mixed feelings about the autonomous vehicles in the city.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman

Waymo was a no-show at Philly’s City Council hearing discussing its oversight. And its written statement didn’t clarify much.
City Council hosted a session which included city officials, local academics, ride share drivers and community members. The session discussed topics like autonomous vehicle regulations, guidelines and the possible impact on transportation workers
Waymo offered a written testimony addressing some issue, but it wasn’t read aloud nor published online, leaving many at the hearing with unanswered questions.
The company began piloting the self-driving vehicles in Philadelphia last summer and announced in December that it would eventually be fully launching in the city. Residents have since had mixed feelings about the autonomous vehicles in the city.
🔗 Read the full story in the link in our bio
📝: Sarah Huffman
Future uses of AI are being shaped now, so I’d rather more workers influence it’s direction than fewer. This is a means of production, why resist it? Inside one union’s embrace from a @technical_ly story by @kaelacoverstech #union #tech #economy #ai #workers
Hollie Mackey is a member of the Northern Cheyenne, and leads the National Science Foundation-funded @ndagtechengine in my @technical_ly latest, She says entrepreneurship won’t save the American soul, despite its popularity, but stories about what entrepreneurship represents — of being pro-newcomer, and getting your fist shot — just might. #economy #startup #tech #founder #northdakota

PO alert: South Philly's Exyn is known for sending robots to map mines and other hard-to-reach spaces.
It's the region's first tech IPO in years, now trading on Nasdaq under EXYN and EXYNW. What does the company do? It builds software that helps drones move through without relying on GPS, a preloaded map or a constant communications link.
The COO is excited about the growing group of robotics and robotics-adjacent companies in the Philadelphia region, with executives informally sharing advice on supply chains, operations and the realities of scaling deep tech.
🔗 Read more in the link in our bio
📝: Holly Quinn

PO alert: South Philly's Exyn is known for sending robots to map mines and other hard-to-reach spaces.
It's the region's first tech IPO in years, now trading on Nasdaq under EXYN and EXYNW. What does the company do? It builds software that helps drones move through without relying on GPS, a preloaded map or a constant communications link.
The COO is excited about the growing group of robotics and robotics-adjacent companies in the Philadelphia region, with executives informally sharing advice on supply chains, operations and the realities of scaling deep tech.
🔗 Read more in the link in our bio
📝: Holly Quinn

PO alert: South Philly's Exyn is known for sending robots to map mines and other hard-to-reach spaces.
It's the region's first tech IPO in years, now trading on Nasdaq under EXYN and EXYNW. What does the company do? It builds software that helps drones move through without relying on GPS, a preloaded map or a constant communications link.
The COO is excited about the growing group of robotics and robotics-adjacent companies in the Philadelphia region, with executives informally sharing advice on supply chains, operations and the realities of scaling deep tech.
🔗 Read more in the link in our bio
📝: Holly Quinn

PO alert: South Philly's Exyn is known for sending robots to map mines and other hard-to-reach spaces.
It's the region's first tech IPO in years, now trading on Nasdaq under EXYN and EXYNW. What does the company do? It builds software that helps drones move through without relying on GPS, a preloaded map or a constant communications link.
The COO is excited about the growing group of robotics and robotics-adjacent companies in the Philadelphia region, with executives informally sharing advice on supply chains, operations and the realities of scaling deep tech.
🔗 Read more in the link in our bio
📝: Holly Quinn

PO alert: South Philly's Exyn is known for sending robots to map mines and other hard-to-reach spaces.
It's the region's first tech IPO in years, now trading on Nasdaq under EXYN and EXYNW. What does the company do? It builds software that helps drones move through without relying on GPS, a preloaded map or a constant communications link.
The COO is excited about the growing group of robotics and robotics-adjacent companies in the Philadelphia region, with executives informally sharing advice on supply chains, operations and the realities of scaling deep tech.
🔗 Read more in the link in our bio
📝: Holly Quinn
Der Instagram Story Viewer ist ein einfaches Tool, mit dem Sie Instagram Stories, Videos, Fotos oder IGTV heimlich ansehen und speichern können. Mit diesem Service können Sie Inhalte herunterladen und offline genießen, wann immer Sie möchten. Wenn Sie etwas Interessantes auf Instagram finden, das Sie später überprüfen möchten, oder Stories anonym ansehen möchten, ist unser Viewer ideal für Sie. Anonstories bietet eine ausgezeichnete Lösung, um Ihre Identität zu schützen. Instagram hat die Stories-Funktion erstmals im August 2023 eingeführt, die schnell auch von anderen Plattformen übernommen wurde, dank ihres fesselnden, zeitlich begrenzten Formats. Stories ermöglichen es Nutzern, schnelle Updates zu teilen, sei es Fotos, Videos oder Selfies, ergänzt durch Text, Emojis oder Filter, und sind nur 24 Stunden lang sichtbar. Dieser begrenzte Zeitrahmen sorgt für eine hohe Interaktion im Vergleich zu regulären Posts. Heutzutage sind Stories eine der beliebtesten Methoden, um sich in sozialen Medien zu verbinden und zu kommunizieren. Wenn Sie jedoch eine Story ansehen, kann der Ersteller Ihren Namen in seiner Viewer-Liste sehen, was ein Problem für die Privatsphäre sein kann. Was ist, wenn Sie Stories durchsuchen möchten, ohne bemerkt zu werden? Hier wird Anonstories nützlich. Es ermöglicht Ihnen, öffentliche Instagram-Inhalte anzusehen, ohne Ihre Identität preiszugeben. Geben Sie einfach den Benutzernamen des Profils ein, das Sie interessiert, und das Tool zeigt dessen neueste Stories an. Funktionen des Anonstories Viewers: - Anonymes Browsen: Sehen Sie Stories, ohne in der Viewer-Liste zu erscheinen. - Kein Konto erforderlich: Sehen Sie öffentliche Inhalte, ohne ein Instagram-Konto zu erstellen. - Inhalte herunterladen: Speichern Sie beliebige Story-Inhalte direkt auf Ihrem Gerät für die Offline-Nutzung. - Highlights anzeigen: Greifen Sie auf Instagram-Highlights zu, auch über das 24-Stunden-Fenster hinaus. - Repost-Überwachung: Verfolgen Sie Reposts oder Interaktionen bei Stories für persönliche Profile. Einschränkungen: - Dieses Tool funktioniert nur mit öffentlichen Accounts; private Accounts bleiben unzugänglich. Vorteile: - Datenschutzfreundlich: Sehen Sie sich beliebige Instagram-Inhalte an, ohne bemerkt zu werden. - Einfach und unkompliziert: Keine App-Installation oder Registrierung erforderlich. - Exklusive Tools: Laden Sie Inhalte herunter und verwalten Sie sie auf eine Weise, die Instagram nicht bietet.
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