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mitmeche

MIT Mechanical Engineering

Official account of MIT's Department of Mechanical Engineering

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2.007 (Design and Manufacturing I) students spend the spring semester learning the principles of mechanical design, then apply those principles to build a robot that's capable of completing a variety of tasks on a themed game board, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to navigate the track and earn points. In the course's culminating event, robots compete head-to-head to earn the highest score.

This year's theme, “Design to Survive,” is inspired by the world of high-speed motorsport. This year's competitors can earn points by driving clockwise laps, navigating ramps between levels, interacting with a variety of racing-themed tasks, and more. 🏎️ 🏁

Come see the competition finals in person on Tuesday, May 12, in the Johnson Ice Arena (W34) starting at 6:30 PM EST, or tune in to the live webcast: https://web.mit.edu/webcast/2.007/

📸s: 2.007 students put the final touches on their robots last week. Credit: Tony Pulsone, MIT MechE


181
1
3 hours ago


2.007 (Design and Manufacturing I) students spend the spring semester learning the principles of mechanical design, then apply those principles to build a robot that's capable of completing a variety of tasks on a themed game board, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to navigate the track and earn points. In the course's culminating event, robots compete head-to-head to earn the highest score.

This year's theme, “Design to Survive,” is inspired by the world of high-speed motorsport. This year's competitors can earn points by driving clockwise laps, navigating ramps between levels, interacting with a variety of racing-themed tasks, and more. 🏎️ 🏁

Come see the competition finals in person on Tuesday, May 12, in the Johnson Ice Arena (W34) starting at 6:30 PM EST, or tune in to the live webcast: https://web.mit.edu/webcast/2.007/

📸s: 2.007 students put the final touches on their robots last week. Credit: Tony Pulsone, MIT MechE


181
1
3 hours ago

2.007 (Design and Manufacturing I) students spend the spring semester learning the principles of mechanical design, then apply those principles to build a robot that's capable of completing a variety of tasks on a themed game board, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to navigate the track and earn points. In the course's culminating event, robots compete head-to-head to earn the highest score.

This year's theme, “Design to Survive,” is inspired by the world of high-speed motorsport. This year's competitors can earn points by driving clockwise laps, navigating ramps between levels, interacting with a variety of racing-themed tasks, and more. 🏎️ 🏁

Come see the competition finals in person on Tuesday, May 12, in the Johnson Ice Arena (W34) starting at 6:30 PM EST, or tune in to the live webcast: https://web.mit.edu/webcast/2.007/

📸s: 2.007 students put the final touches on their robots last week. Credit: Tony Pulsone, MIT MechE


181
1
3 hours ago

2.007 (Design and Manufacturing I) students spend the spring semester learning the principles of mechanical design, then apply those principles to build a robot that's capable of completing a variety of tasks on a themed game board, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to navigate the track and earn points. In the course's culminating event, robots compete head-to-head to earn the highest score.

This year's theme, “Design to Survive,” is inspired by the world of high-speed motorsport. This year's competitors can earn points by driving clockwise laps, navigating ramps between levels, interacting with a variety of racing-themed tasks, and more. 🏎️ 🏁

Come see the competition finals in person on Tuesday, May 12, in the Johnson Ice Arena (W34) starting at 6:30 PM EST, or tune in to the live webcast: https://web.mit.edu/webcast/2.007/

📸s: 2.007 students put the final touches on their robots last week. Credit: Tony Pulsone, MIT MechE


181
1
3 hours ago

2.007 (Design and Manufacturing I) students spend the spring semester learning the principles of mechanical design, then apply those principles to build a robot that's capable of completing a variety of tasks on a themed game board, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to navigate the track and earn points. In the course's culminating event, robots compete head-to-head to earn the highest score.

This year's theme, “Design to Survive,” is inspired by the world of high-speed motorsport. This year's competitors can earn points by driving clockwise laps, navigating ramps between levels, interacting with a variety of racing-themed tasks, and more. 🏎️ 🏁

Come see the competition finals in person on Tuesday, May 12, in the Johnson Ice Arena (W34) starting at 6:30 PM EST, or tune in to the live webcast: https://web.mit.edu/webcast/2.007/

📸s: 2.007 students put the final touches on their robots last week. Credit: Tony Pulsone, MIT MechE


181
1
3 hours ago

2.007 (Design and Manufacturing I) students spend the spring semester learning the principles of mechanical design, then apply those principles to build a robot that's capable of completing a variety of tasks on a themed game board, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to navigate the track and earn points. In the course's culminating event, robots compete head-to-head to earn the highest score.

This year's theme, “Design to Survive,” is inspired by the world of high-speed motorsport. This year's competitors can earn points by driving clockwise laps, navigating ramps between levels, interacting with a variety of racing-themed tasks, and more. 🏎️ 🏁

Come see the competition finals in person on Tuesday, May 12, in the Johnson Ice Arena (W34) starting at 6:30 PM EST, or tune in to the live webcast: https://web.mit.edu/webcast/2.007/

📸s: 2.007 students put the final touches on their robots last week. Credit: Tony Pulsone, MIT MechE


181
1
3 hours ago

2.007 (Design and Manufacturing I) students spend the spring semester learning the principles of mechanical design, then apply those principles to build a robot that's capable of completing a variety of tasks on a themed game board, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to navigate the track and earn points. In the course's culminating event, robots compete head-to-head to earn the highest score.

This year's theme, “Design to Survive,” is inspired by the world of high-speed motorsport. This year's competitors can earn points by driving clockwise laps, navigating ramps between levels, interacting with a variety of racing-themed tasks, and more. 🏎️ 🏁

Come see the competition finals in person on Tuesday, May 12, in the Johnson Ice Arena (W34) starting at 6:30 PM EST, or tune in to the live webcast: https://web.mit.edu/webcast/2.007/

📸s: 2.007 students put the final touches on their robots last week. Credit: Tony Pulsone, MIT MechE


181
1
3 hours ago

2.007 (Design and Manufacturing I) students spend the spring semester learning the principles of mechanical design, then apply those principles to build a robot that's capable of completing a variety of tasks on a themed game board, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to navigate the track and earn points. In the course's culminating event, robots compete head-to-head to earn the highest score.

This year's theme, “Design to Survive,” is inspired by the world of high-speed motorsport. This year's competitors can earn points by driving clockwise laps, navigating ramps between levels, interacting with a variety of racing-themed tasks, and more. 🏎️ 🏁

Come see the competition finals in person on Tuesday, May 12, in the Johnson Ice Arena (W34) starting at 6:30 PM EST, or tune in to the live webcast: https://web.mit.edu/webcast/2.007/

📸s: 2.007 students put the final touches on their robots last week. Credit: Tony Pulsone, MIT MechE


181
1
3 hours ago


2.007 (Design and Manufacturing I) students spend the spring semester learning the principles of mechanical design, then apply those principles to build a robot that's capable of completing a variety of tasks on a themed game board, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to navigate the track and earn points. In the course's culminating event, robots compete head-to-head to earn the highest score.

This year's theme, “Design to Survive,” is inspired by the world of high-speed motorsport. This year's competitors can earn points by driving clockwise laps, navigating ramps between levels, interacting with a variety of racing-themed tasks, and more. 🏎️ 🏁

Come see the competition finals in person on Tuesday, May 12, in the Johnson Ice Arena (W34) starting at 6:30 PM EST, or tune in to the live webcast: https://web.mit.edu/webcast/2.007/

📸s: 2.007 students put the final touches on their robots last week. Credit: Tony Pulsone, MIT MechE


181
1
3 hours ago

2.007 (Design and Manufacturing I) students spend the spring semester learning the principles of mechanical design, then apply those principles to build a robot that's capable of completing a variety of tasks on a themed game board, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to navigate the track and earn points. In the course's culminating event, robots compete head-to-head to earn the highest score.

This year's theme, “Design to Survive,” is inspired by the world of high-speed motorsport. This year's competitors can earn points by driving clockwise laps, navigating ramps between levels, interacting with a variety of racing-themed tasks, and more. 🏎️ 🏁

Come see the competition finals in person on Tuesday, May 12, in the Johnson Ice Arena (W34) starting at 6:30 PM EST, or tune in to the live webcast: https://web.mit.edu/webcast/2.007/

📸s: 2.007 students put the final touches on their robots last week. Credit: Tony Pulsone, MIT MechE


181
1
3 hours ago

A new physics-based tool developed by MechE Senior Research Scientist Yuming Liu and Professor Nicholas Makris reproduces a violin’s sound. The tool could help violin makers play around with an instrument’s design and tweak its sound even before a single part is carved.

https://meche.mit.edu/news-media/mit-engineers%E2%80%99-virtual-violin-produces-realistic-sounds

📸: Adobe Stock Images


31
1 days ago

Jacqui van Zyl, a second year PhD student in MechE, studies the cell mechanics involved in brain waste clearance, or how waste and toxins are clearing the brain through the lymphatic system. The goal is to better understand how to treat and help with the progression of neurodegenerative diseases like dementia.

Van Zyl presented her research at MERE, the Mechanical Engineering Research Exposition, in March. Come see more great MIT MechE research next week, Tuesday, May 12, at MExpo, an afternoon and evening full of research, competition, awards, and more! MExpo is free and open to all.

Come see what MechE is building! 🔗 https://calendar.mit.edu/event/mexpo-2026-mit-mechanical-engineering-showcase


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5
2 days ago

Co-founded by Dan Sobek ’88, SM ’92, PhD ’97, 1s1 Energy thinks it has the technology to finally make green hydrogen go mainstream. The company has developed a filtration material for hydrogen electrolyzers that it says reduces energy use by 30 percent.

📸: Christine Daniloff, MIT; iStock

https://meche.mit.edu/news-media/toward-cheaper-cleaner-hydrogen-production


21
2 days ago

MIT researchers have developed an ultra-efficient microchip that can protect wireless biomedical devices, like pacemakers and insulin pumps, from quantum attacks. Associate Professor Giovanni Traverso, a gastroenterologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and an associate member of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, is among the authors on a new paper describing the work.

📸: Christine Daniloff, MIT; iStock

https://meche.mit.edu/news-media/new-chip-can-protect-wireless-biomedical-devices-quantum-attacks


47
4 days ago

We're excited to announce MExpo 2026 — the Mechanical Engineering Exposition!

Join us on Tuesday, May 12, at the Johnson Athletics Center (120 Vassar St, Cambridge) for a full afternoon and evening of mechanical engineering at its best.

🔬 2:30–5:00 PM | Research Showcase & de Florez Awards Competition
Grad students, postdocs, and undergrads present original research and design projects spanning robotics, energy technologies, medical devices, underwater vehicles, computational engineering, and more — plus MIT's celebrated student vehicle teams.

🤖 6:30 PM | 2.007 Robot Competition Finals - This year's theme is Formula 1! Every match features two robots competing head-to-head, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to survive the track and earn the highest score.

MExpo is free, fully indoors, and open to all — industry professionals, K-12 educators and students, families, and anyone curious about the future of mechanical engineering.

Come see what MechE is building! 🔗 https://calendar.mit.edu/event/mexpo-2026-mit-mechanical-engineering-showcase

#MExpo2026 #MITMechE #MechanicalEngineering #MIT #Engineering #STEM

📸: 1-3: This year's 2.007 students prepare for their final competition; 4-5: photos from de Florez competitions in years past; 6: students hold an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV). 8: MExpo Logo. Credit: MIT Mechanical Engineering; VR photo credit: MIT Pappalardo Lab.


195
1 weeks ago


We're excited to announce MExpo 2026 — the Mechanical Engineering Exposition!

Join us on Tuesday, May 12, at the Johnson Athletics Center (120 Vassar St, Cambridge) for a full afternoon and evening of mechanical engineering at its best.

🔬 2:30–5:00 PM | Research Showcase & de Florez Awards Competition
Grad students, postdocs, and undergrads present original research and design projects spanning robotics, energy technologies, medical devices, underwater vehicles, computational engineering, and more — plus MIT's celebrated student vehicle teams.

🤖 6:30 PM | 2.007 Robot Competition Finals - This year's theme is Formula 1! Every match features two robots competing head-to-head, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to survive the track and earn the highest score.

MExpo is free, fully indoors, and open to all — industry professionals, K-12 educators and students, families, and anyone curious about the future of mechanical engineering.

Come see what MechE is building! 🔗 https://calendar.mit.edu/event/mexpo-2026-mit-mechanical-engineering-showcase

#MExpo2026 #MITMechE #MechanicalEngineering #MIT #Engineering #STEM

📸: 1-3: This year's 2.007 students prepare for their final competition; 4-5: photos from de Florez competitions in years past; 6: students hold an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV). 8: MExpo Logo. Credit: MIT Mechanical Engineering; VR photo credit: MIT Pappalardo Lab.


195
1 weeks ago

We're excited to announce MExpo 2026 — the Mechanical Engineering Exposition!

Join us on Tuesday, May 12, at the Johnson Athletics Center (120 Vassar St, Cambridge) for a full afternoon and evening of mechanical engineering at its best.

🔬 2:30–5:00 PM | Research Showcase & de Florez Awards Competition
Grad students, postdocs, and undergrads present original research and design projects spanning robotics, energy technologies, medical devices, underwater vehicles, computational engineering, and more — plus MIT's celebrated student vehicle teams.

🤖 6:30 PM | 2.007 Robot Competition Finals - This year's theme is Formula 1! Every match features two robots competing head-to-head, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to survive the track and earn the highest score.

MExpo is free, fully indoors, and open to all — industry professionals, K-12 educators and students, families, and anyone curious about the future of mechanical engineering.

Come see what MechE is building! 🔗 https://calendar.mit.edu/event/mexpo-2026-mit-mechanical-engineering-showcase

#MExpo2026 #MITMechE #MechanicalEngineering #MIT #Engineering #STEM

📸: 1-3: This year's 2.007 students prepare for their final competition; 4-5: photos from de Florez competitions in years past; 6: students hold an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV). 8: MExpo Logo. Credit: MIT Mechanical Engineering; VR photo credit: MIT Pappalardo Lab.


195
1 weeks ago

We're excited to announce MExpo 2026 — the Mechanical Engineering Exposition!

Join us on Tuesday, May 12, at the Johnson Athletics Center (120 Vassar St, Cambridge) for a full afternoon and evening of mechanical engineering at its best.

🔬 2:30–5:00 PM | Research Showcase & de Florez Awards Competition
Grad students, postdocs, and undergrads present original research and design projects spanning robotics, energy technologies, medical devices, underwater vehicles, computational engineering, and more — plus MIT's celebrated student vehicle teams.

🤖 6:30 PM | 2.007 Robot Competition Finals - This year's theme is Formula 1! Every match features two robots competing head-to-head, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to survive the track and earn the highest score.

MExpo is free, fully indoors, and open to all — industry professionals, K-12 educators and students, families, and anyone curious about the future of mechanical engineering.

Come see what MechE is building! 🔗 https://calendar.mit.edu/event/mexpo-2026-mit-mechanical-engineering-showcase

#MExpo2026 #MITMechE #MechanicalEngineering #MIT #Engineering #STEM

📸: 1-3: This year's 2.007 students prepare for their final competition; 4-5: photos from de Florez competitions in years past; 6: students hold an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV). 8: MExpo Logo. Credit: MIT Mechanical Engineering; VR photo credit: MIT Pappalardo Lab.


195
1 weeks ago

We're excited to announce MExpo 2026 — the Mechanical Engineering Exposition!

Join us on Tuesday, May 12, at the Johnson Athletics Center (120 Vassar St, Cambridge) for a full afternoon and evening of mechanical engineering at its best.

🔬 2:30–5:00 PM | Research Showcase & de Florez Awards Competition
Grad students, postdocs, and undergrads present original research and design projects spanning robotics, energy technologies, medical devices, underwater vehicles, computational engineering, and more — plus MIT's celebrated student vehicle teams.

🤖 6:30 PM | 2.007 Robot Competition Finals - This year's theme is Formula 1! Every match features two robots competing head-to-head, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to survive the track and earn the highest score.

MExpo is free, fully indoors, and open to all — industry professionals, K-12 educators and students, families, and anyone curious about the future of mechanical engineering.

Come see what MechE is building! 🔗 https://calendar.mit.edu/event/mexpo-2026-mit-mechanical-engineering-showcase

#MExpo2026 #MITMechE #MechanicalEngineering #MIT #Engineering #STEM

📸: 1-3: This year's 2.007 students prepare for their final competition; 4-5: photos from de Florez competitions in years past; 6: students hold an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV). 8: MExpo Logo. Credit: MIT Mechanical Engineering; VR photo credit: MIT Pappalardo Lab.


195
1 weeks ago

We're excited to announce MExpo 2026 — the Mechanical Engineering Exposition!

Join us on Tuesday, May 12, at the Johnson Athletics Center (120 Vassar St, Cambridge) for a full afternoon and evening of mechanical engineering at its best.

🔬 2:30–5:00 PM | Research Showcase & de Florez Awards Competition
Grad students, postdocs, and undergrads present original research and design projects spanning robotics, energy technologies, medical devices, underwater vehicles, computational engineering, and more — plus MIT's celebrated student vehicle teams.

🤖 6:30 PM | 2.007 Robot Competition Finals - This year's theme is Formula 1! Every match features two robots competing head-to-head, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to survive the track and earn the highest score.

MExpo is free, fully indoors, and open to all — industry professionals, K-12 educators and students, families, and anyone curious about the future of mechanical engineering.

Come see what MechE is building! 🔗 https://calendar.mit.edu/event/mexpo-2026-mit-mechanical-engineering-showcase

#MExpo2026 #MITMechE #MechanicalEngineering #MIT #Engineering #STEM

📸: 1-3: This year's 2.007 students prepare for their final competition; 4-5: photos from de Florez competitions in years past; 6: students hold an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV). 8: MExpo Logo. Credit: MIT Mechanical Engineering; VR photo credit: MIT Pappalardo Lab.


195
1 weeks ago

We're excited to announce MExpo 2026 — the Mechanical Engineering Exposition!

Join us on Tuesday, May 12, at the Johnson Athletics Center (120 Vassar St, Cambridge) for a full afternoon and evening of mechanical engineering at its best.

🔬 2:30–5:00 PM | Research Showcase & de Florez Awards Competition
Grad students, postdocs, and undergrads present original research and design projects spanning robotics, energy technologies, medical devices, underwater vehicles, computational engineering, and more — plus MIT's celebrated student vehicle teams.

🤖 6:30 PM | 2.007 Robot Competition Finals - This year's theme is Formula 1! Every match features two robots competing head-to-head, balancing speed, precision, and strategy to survive the track and earn the highest score.

MExpo is free, fully indoors, and open to all — industry professionals, K-12 educators and students, families, and anyone curious about the future of mechanical engineering.

Come see what MechE is building! 🔗 https://calendar.mit.edu/event/mexpo-2026-mit-mechanical-engineering-showcase

#MExpo2026 #MITMechE #MechanicalEngineering #MIT #Engineering #STEM

📸: 1-3: This year's 2.007 students prepare for their final competition; 4-5: photos from de Florez competitions in years past; 6: students hold an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV). 8: MExpo Logo. Credit: MIT Mechanical Engineering; VR photo credit: MIT Pappalardo Lab.


195
1 weeks ago


In a famous 1958 MIT hack, the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity used the body-length of then first-year pledge Oliver R. Smoot, Jr ’62 to measure the Harvard Bridge, painting markings along the way to get the full measurement: 364.4 Smoots (plus 1 ear). Those painted markings remain today. In an homage to Smoot, and to celebrate the 85th birthday of Dr. Martin Klein ‘62, an MIT team recently rolled out a new unit of measurement: measuring the nearby Longfellow Bridge in units of Klein.

Dr. Klein, a member of the MIT Sea Grant Advisory Board and the MIT Museum Collections Committee, is known as the father of commercial side-scan sonar. His sonar technology has been used worldwide to help locate countless famous shipwrecks including the Titanic and the World War I ocean liner RMS Lusitania.

One Smoot is equal to 5ft 7in or 1.7018 meters. One Klein (4ft 9.5in) is equal to 0.85820896 Smoots.


2.4K
17
1 weeks ago

The weird quantum behavior of subatomic particles can be understood through everyday classical ideas, according to a new study by MIT researchers, including MechE Professor Jean-Jacques Slotine. 📸: Jose-Luis Olivares, MIT; iStock

https://meche.mit.edu/news-media/new-study-bridges-worlds-classical-and-quantum-physics


23
1 weeks ago

Plants can sense the sound of rain, a new study shows. In experiments with rice seeds submerged in water, the sound of falling droplets shook the seeds out of a dormant state, stimulating them to germinate more quickly than seeds not exposed to the same sound vibrations. “What this study is saying is that seeds can sense sound in ways that can help them survive,” says study author Professor Nicholas Makris.

https://meche.mit.edu/news-media/plants-can-sense-sound-rain-new-study-finds


39
1 weeks ago

Researchers at MIT and the University of Maine Darling Marine Center have developed a chemical-free approach that uses electricity to balance ocean acidity. Read more about the project, and watch the full video, here: https://tinyurl.com/MITblueeconomy


440
2
1 weeks ago

MechE Alum Darryll J. Pines SM ’88, PhD ’92 is among the MIT community members elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences for 2026. This year's honorees include four MIT faculty members and an additional 13 alumni.

The MIT faculty elected in 2026 are: Isaiah Andrews PhD ’14,Charles E. and Susan T. Harris Professor of Economics; David Atkin, Barton L. Weller (1940) Professor of Economics; Pablo Jarillo-Herrero, Cecil and Ida Green Professor of Physics; and Benjamin Paul Weiss, Robert R. Shrock Professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences.

https://meche.mit.edu/news-media/mit-affiliates-elected-american-academy-arts-and-sciences-2026


227
2
2 weeks ago

Researchers are developing hardware and algorithms to improve collaboration between divers and autonomous underwater vehicles engaged in maritime missions. Such underwater human-robot teaming is the focus of an MIT Lincoln Laboratory project carried out by the Advanced Undersea Systems and Technology Group. The navigation side of the project picks up on work started by the MIT Marine Robotics Group, led by Professor John Leonard, to develop diver-AUV teaming algorithms.

📸: Tim Briggs/Lincoln Laboratory

https://meche.mit.edu/news-media/human-machine-teaming-dives-underwater


43
2 weeks ago


View Instagram Stories in Secret

The Instagram Story Viewer is an easy tool that lets you secretly watch and save Instagram stories, videos, photos, or IGTV. With this service, you can download content and enjoy it offline whenever you like. If you find something interesting on Instagram that you’d like to check out later or want to view stories while staying anonymous, our Viewer is perfect for you. Anonstories offers an excellent solution for keeping your identity hidden. Instagram first launched the Stories feature in August 2023, which was quickly adopted by other platforms due to its engaging, time-sensitive format. Stories let users share quick updates, whether photos, videos, or selfies, enhanced with text, emojis, or filters, and are visible for only 24 hours. This limited time frame creates high engagement compared to regular posts. In today’s world, Stories are one of the most popular ways to connect and communicate on social media. However, when you view a Story, the creator can see your name in their viewer list, which may be a privacy concern. What if you wish to browse Stories without being noticed? Here’s where Anonstories becomes useful. It allows you to watch public Instagram content without revealing your identity. Simply enter the username of the profile you’re curious about, and the tool will display their latest Stories. Features of Anonstories Viewer: - Anonymous Browsing: Watch Stories without showing up on the viewer list. - No Account Needed: View public content without signing up for an Instagram account. - Content Download: Save any Stories content directly to your device for offline use. - View Highlights: Access Instagram Highlights, even beyond the 24-hour window. - Repost Monitoring: Track the reposts or engagement levels on Stories for personal profiles. Limitations: - This tool works only with public accounts; private accounts remain inaccessible. Benefits: - Privacy-Friendly: Watch any Instagram content without being noticed. - Simple and Easy: No app installation or registration required. - Exclusive Tools: Download and manage content in ways Instagram doesn’t offer.

Advantages of Anonstories

Explore IG Stories Privately

Keep track of Instagram updates discreetly while protecting your privacy and staying anonymous.


Private Instagram Viewer

View profiles and photos anonymously with ease using the Private Profile Viewer.


Story Viewer for Free

This free tool allows you to view Instagram Stories anonymously, ensuring your activity remains hidden from the story uploader.

Frequently asked questions

 
Anonymity

Anonstories lets users view Instagram stories without alerting the creator.

 
Device Compatibility

Works seamlessly on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and modern browsers like Chrome and Safari.

 
Safety and Privacy

Prioritizes secure, anonymous browsing without requiring login credentials.

 
No Registration

Users can view public stories by simply entering a username—no account needed.

 
Supported Formats

Downloads photos (JPEG) and videos (MP4) with ease.

 
Cost

The service is free to use.

 
Private Accounts

Content from private accounts can only be accessed by followers.

 
File Usage

Files are for personal or educational use only and must comply with copyright rules.

 
How It Works

Enter a public username to view or download stories. The service generates direct links for saving content locally.