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mitdmse

MIT DMSE

MIT's Department of Materials Science and Engineering

412
posts
85
followers
8.2K
following

Feathers give birds their dazzling colors. They repel water, trap heat, and even muffle sound—letting owls hunt in near silence.
How? It all comes down to structure.

In Birds Up Close, @MIT materials engineer and lifelong birder Lorna J. Gibson takes a microscopic look at feathers, bones, bills, eggs, and flight to reveal how birds do what they do—from hovering in place to flying hundreds of miles without tiring.

Published by @mitpress and out now, the book is written for anyone curious about birds—no engineering background required. (Though there’s plenty to dig into if you want it.)

“I wasn’t writing it for engineers; I was writing it for birders—people who are curious about natural history.”

The third image here shows a feather under a scanning electron microscope, revealing the intricate structures that give feathers their remarkable properties.

Read more at the News & Highlights link in our bio


29
19 hours ago


Feathers give birds their dazzling colors. They repel water, trap heat, and even muffle sound—letting owls hunt in near silence.
How? It all comes down to structure.

In Birds Up Close, @MIT materials engineer and lifelong birder Lorna J. Gibson takes a microscopic look at feathers, bones, bills, eggs, and flight to reveal how birds do what they do—from hovering in place to flying hundreds of miles without tiring.

Published by @mitpress and out now, the book is written for anyone curious about birds—no engineering background required. (Though there’s plenty to dig into if you want it.)

“I wasn’t writing it for engineers; I was writing it for birders—people who are curious about natural history.”

The third image here shows a feather under a scanning electron microscope, revealing the intricate structures that give feathers their remarkable properties.

Read more at the News & Highlights link in our bio


29
19 hours ago

Feathers give birds their dazzling colors. They repel water, trap heat, and even muffle sound—letting owls hunt in near silence.
How? It all comes down to structure.

In Birds Up Close, @MIT materials engineer and lifelong birder Lorna J. Gibson takes a microscopic look at feathers, bones, bills, eggs, and flight to reveal how birds do what they do—from hovering in place to flying hundreds of miles without tiring.

Published by @mitpress and out now, the book is written for anyone curious about birds—no engineering background required. (Though there’s plenty to dig into if you want it.)

“I wasn’t writing it for engineers; I was writing it for birders—people who are curious about natural history.”

The third image here shows a feather under a scanning electron microscope, revealing the intricate structures that give feathers their remarkable properties.

Read more at the News & Highlights link in our bio


29
19 hours ago

🦜 What makes bird feathers certain colors?

It's not just for looks. The colors depend on the structure of feathers at the microscopic level, which can lead to amazing blues and iridescent effects.

Lorna J. Gibson, professor emerita of @mitmeche and @mitdsme, shares more about the structural details that determine feather colors in the first Open Seminar on MIT Learn.

🔗 Watch the full seminar at the link in our bio!

#StructuralBiology #MaterialScience #MechanicalEngineering #FYP #Ornithology


63
1
1 weeks ago

In this demo of work by the Wallin Group at @MIT (Nature Communications), a soft rubber-like material called a PIG gel is exposed to light.

The illuminated regions switch from insulating to conductive, and as the light moves, new electrical pathways form—causing LEDs to light up one by one.

A striking example of how light can “write” circuits into soft materials.


110
1
1 weeks ago

@ucirvine’s Joe Patterson led an MSE Seminar on April 21, discussing how peptide-based supramolecular materials use energy to build and rearrange themselves, maintaining constantly changing “out of equilibrium” states.

📸 Jason Sparapani


31
1 weeks ago

@ucirvine’s Joe Patterson led an MSE Seminar on April 21, discussing how peptide-based supramolecular materials use energy to build and rearrange themselves, maintaining constantly changing “out of equilibrium” states.

📸 Jason Sparapani


31
1 weeks ago

@ucirvine’s Joe Patterson led an MSE Seminar on April 21, discussing how peptide-based supramolecular materials use energy to build and rearrange themselves, maintaining constantly changing “out of equilibrium” states.

📸 Jason Sparapani


31
1 weeks ago


@ucirvine’s Joe Patterson led an MSE Seminar on April 21, discussing how peptide-based supramolecular materials use energy to build and rearrange themselves, maintaining constantly changing “out of equilibrium” states.

📸 Jason Sparapani


31
1 weeks ago

@ucirvine’s Joe Patterson led an MSE Seminar on April 21, discussing how peptide-based supramolecular materials use energy to build and rearrange themselves, maintaining constantly changing “out of equilibrium” states.

📸 Jason Sparapani


31
1 weeks ago

Alumnus Tom Davis ’84 SM ’85 recalls a “soul-crushing” first exam at @MIT—scoring 49 out of 100 in 3.091 (Introduction to Solid-State Chemistry)—and how an unexpected comment from a TA pushed him to improve.

“He had a big smile on his face, and he said something to the effect of, ‘I expect to see you double your score on the next quiz!’” Davis recalls. “At this remove, I’m comfortable saying he was not mocking me. He was encouraging.”

Read more at the News & Highlights link in our bio

📸 Photo illustration by Gretchen Neff Lambert


66
2 weeks ago

Kirk Kolenbrander, DMSE lecturer and instructor for 3.091 (Introduction to Solid-State Chemistry), spoke at the Engineering@MIT event during Campus Preview Weekend. He introduced prospective MIT first-years to materials science and engineering and emphasized the importance of hands-on learning.

Faculty and lecturers across the School of Engineering showcased their majors, with Dean Paula Hammond also speaking about the school more broadly.

📸 Jason Sparapani


78
1
2 weeks ago

Kirk Kolenbrander, DMSE lecturer and instructor for 3.091 (Introduction to Solid-State Chemistry), spoke at the Engineering@MIT event during Campus Preview Weekend. He introduced prospective MIT first-years to materials science and engineering and emphasized the importance of hands-on learning.

Faculty and lecturers across the School of Engineering showcased their majors, with Dean Paula Hammond also speaking about the school more broadly.

📸 Jason Sparapani


78
1
2 weeks ago

Kirk Kolenbrander, DMSE lecturer and instructor for 3.091 (Introduction to Solid-State Chemistry), spoke at the Engineering@MIT event during Campus Preview Weekend. He introduced prospective MIT first-years to materials science and engineering and emphasized the importance of hands-on learning.

Faculty and lecturers across the School of Engineering showcased their majors, with Dean Paula Hammond also speaking about the school more broadly.

📸 Jason Sparapani


78
1
2 weeks ago

Kirk Kolenbrander, DMSE lecturer and instructor for 3.091 (Introduction to Solid-State Chemistry), spoke at the Engineering@MIT event during Campus Preview Weekend. He introduced prospective MIT first-years to materials science and engineering and emphasized the importance of hands-on learning.

Faculty and lecturers across the School of Engineering showcased their majors, with Dean Paula Hammond also speaking about the school more broadly.

📸 Jason Sparapani


78
1
2 weeks ago


Kirk Kolenbrander, DMSE lecturer and instructor for 3.091 (Introduction to Solid-State Chemistry), spoke at the Engineering@MIT event during Campus Preview Weekend. He introduced prospective MIT first-years to materials science and engineering and emphasized the importance of hands-on learning.

Faculty and lecturers across the School of Engineering showcased their majors, with Dean Paula Hammond also speaking about the school more broadly.

📸 Jason Sparapani


78
1
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago


At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

At the CPW Expo on April 17, DMSE faculty, staff, and students met prospective @MIT first-years and introduced materials science and engineering as a field of study and career path.

📸 Jason Sparapani


52
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Students in Frances Ross’s 3.001 (Science and Engineering of Materials) put a recent lesson on cement into practice Tuesday in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory (the forge and foundry), mixing and pouring it into molds to harden into various forms.

📸 Jason Sparapani


64
2 weeks ago

Another strong year for materials at @MIT.

U.S. News and World Report has again ranked MIT’s graduate engineering program first in the nation, with materials engineering among six top-placed disciplines. The Institute has held the No. 1 spot since 1990, when the magazine first ranked such programs.

QS World University Rankings has also placed MIT in the No. 1 spot in 12 subject areas for 2026, including materials science. MIT has been ranked as the world's top university by QS for 14 straight years.

Read more at the News & Highlights link in our bio

📸 Gretchen Ertl


90
3 weeks ago

Another strong year for materials at @MIT.

U.S. News and World Report has again ranked MIT’s graduate engineering program first in the nation, with materials engineering among six top-placed disciplines. The Institute has held the No. 1 spot since 1990, when the magazine first ranked such programs.

QS World University Rankings has also placed MIT in the No. 1 spot in 12 subject areas for 2026, including materials science. MIT has been ranked as the world's top university by QS for 14 straight years.

Read more at the News & Highlights link in our bio

📸 Gretchen Ertl


90
3 weeks ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE’s Shaymus Hudson, with @mtarkanian and @rheavedro, pours molten bronze into molds in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laboratory—the forge and foundry.

Wax carvings of MIT seals are baked out first, and the bronze fills the empty molds, forming medallions for every DMSE graduate at Commencement.


75
1 months ago

DMSE alum Ye Ji Kim PhD ’25 has been named a 2026 Schmidt Science Fellow.

She will develop noninvasive tools to monitor and control neural circuits in the gut-brain axis, exploring new ways to treat psychiatric, neurological, and metabolic conditions without surgery or implants.


111
1
1 months ago

DMSE graduate students presented their research in a February 27 poster session during the department’s Visit Day event for prospective students.

Twenty-six accepted applicants visited @MIT for faculty presentations, lab tours, and social events.

📸 Jason Sparapani


85
1 months ago

DMSE graduate students presented their research in a February 27 poster session during the department’s Visit Day event for prospective students.

Twenty-six accepted applicants visited @MIT for faculty presentations, lab tours, and social events.

📸 Jason Sparapani


85
1 months ago

DMSE graduate students presented their research in a February 27 poster session during the department’s Visit Day event for prospective students.

Twenty-six accepted applicants visited @MIT for faculty presentations, lab tours, and social events.

📸 Jason Sparapani


85
1 months ago

DMSE graduate students presented their research in a February 27 poster session during the department’s Visit Day event for prospective students.

Twenty-six accepted applicants visited @MIT for faculty presentations, lab tours, and social events.

📸 Jason Sparapani


85
1 months ago

DMSE graduate students presented their research in a February 27 poster session during the department’s Visit Day event for prospective students.

Twenty-six accepted applicants visited @MIT for faculty presentations, lab tours, and social events.

📸 Jason Sparapani


85
1 months ago

DMSE graduate students presented their research in a February 27 poster session during the department’s Visit Day event for prospective students.

Twenty-six accepted applicants visited @MIT for faculty presentations, lab tours, and social events.

📸 Jason Sparapani


85
1 months ago

DMSE graduate students presented their research in a February 27 poster session during the department’s Visit Day event for prospective students.

Twenty-six accepted applicants visited @MIT for faculty presentations, lab tours, and social events.

📸 Jason Sparapani


85
1 months ago

DMSE graduate students presented their research in a February 27 poster session during the department’s Visit Day event for prospective students.

Twenty-six accepted applicants visited @MIT for faculty presentations, lab tours, and social events.

📸 Jason Sparapani


85
1 months ago

DMSE graduate students presented their research in a February 27 poster session during the department’s Visit Day event for prospective students.

Twenty-six accepted applicants visited @MIT for faculty presentations, lab tours, and social events.

📸 Jason Sparapani


85
1 months ago


Przeglądaj historie na Instagramie w tajemnicy

Instagram Story Viewer to proste narzędzie, które pozwala na ciche oglądanie i zapisywanie historii Instagram, filmów, zdjęć lub IGTV. Dzięki tej usłudze możesz pobrać zawartość i cieszyć się nią offline, kiedy chcesz. Jeśli znajdziesz coś interesującego na Instagramie, co chcesz sprawdzić później, lub chcesz oglądać historie pozostając anonimowym, nasz Viewer jest idealny dla Ciebie. Anonstories oferuje doskonałe rozwiązanie do ukrywania swojej tożsamości. Instagram po raz pierwszy uruchomił funkcję historii w sierpniu 2023 roku, która szybko została zaadoptowana przez inne platformy ze względu na jej angażujący, czasowo ograniczony format. Historie pozwalają użytkownikom dzielić się szybkimi aktualizacjami, czy to zdjęciami, filmami, czy selfie, wzbogaconymi o tekst, emotikony lub filtry, i są widoczne tylko przez 24 godziny. Ten ograniczony czas sprawia, że historie cieszą się dużym zaangażowaniem w porównaniu do zwykłych postów. W dzisiejszym świecie historie to jeden z najpopularniejszych sposobów komunikacji na mediach społecznościowych. Jednak gdy oglądasz historię, twórca może zobaczyć Twoje imię na liście oglądających, co może stanowić problem związany z prywatnością. Co jeśli chcesz przeglądać historie, nie będąc zauważonym? Tutaj Anonstories staje się przydatne. Umożliwia oglądanie publicznej zawartości Instagram bez ujawniania tożsamości. Wystarczy wpisać nazwę użytkownika profilu, który Cię interesuje, a narzędzie wyświetli ich najnowsze historie. Cechy Anonstories Viewer: - Anonimowe przeglądanie: Oglądaj historie bez pojawiania się na liście oglądających. - Brak konta: Oglądaj publiczną zawartość bez logowania się na konto Instagram. - Pobieranie zawartości: Zapisuj dowolną zawartość historii bezpośrednio na swoje urządzenie do użytku offline. - Przeglądaj najważniejsze: Dostęp do Instagram Highlights, nawet po 24 godzinach. - Monitorowanie repostów: Śledź reposty lub poziom zaangażowania w historię na prywatnych profilach. Ograniczenia: - Narzędzie działa tylko z publicznymi kontami; konta prywatne pozostają niedostępne. Korzyści: - Przyjazne dla prywatności: Oglądaj zawartość Instagram bez bycia zauważonym. - Proste i łatwe: Brak potrzeby instalacji aplikacji lub rejestracji. - Ekskluzywne narzędzia: Pobieraj i zarządzaj zawartością w sposób, którego Instagram nie oferuje.

Zalety Anonstories

Oglądaj IG Stories Prywatnie

Śledź aktualizacje na Instagramie dyskretnie, chroniąc swoją prywatność i pozostając anonimowym.


Prywatny Viewer na Instagramie

Oglądaj profile i zdjęcia anonimowo za pomocą Prywatnego Viewera.


Bezpłatny Story Viewer

To darmowe narzędzie pozwala oglądać historie Instagram anonimowo, zapewniając, że Twoja aktywność pozostaje ukryta przed twórcą historii.

Najczęściej zadawane pytania

 
Anonimowość

Anonstories pozwala użytkownikom oglądać historie na Instagramie bez informowania twórcy.

 
Kompatybilność z urządzeniami

Funkcjonuje płynnie na iOS, Android, Windows, macOS i nowoczesnych przeglądarkach takich jak Chrome i Safari.

 
Bezpieczeństwo i Prywatność

Priorytetem jest bezpieczne, anonimowe przeglądanie bez konieczności logowania się.

 
Brak rejestracji

Użytkownicy mogą oglądać publiczne historie, wpisując nazwę użytkownika – bez konieczności zakładania konta.

 
Obsługiwane formaty

Pobiera zdjęcia (JPEG) i filmy (MP4) z łatwością.

 
Koszt

Usługa jest bezpłatna.

 
Konta prywatne

Treści z prywatnych kont mogą być dostępne tylko dla obserwujących.

 
Użycie plików

Pliki są przeznaczone do użytku osobistego lub edukacyjnego i muszą być zgodne z przepisami dotyczącymi praw autorskich.

 
Jak to działa

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