Is there anything like a nitter equivalent for telegram. Many communities get locked behind it and I cannot access anything. Thanks!
V F veronicapfiorentino@gmail.com wrote:
Is there anything like
I believe, it would be more productive to ask something more specific — namely, what do you what to achieve.
Many communities get locked behind it and I cannot access anything.
Locked behind what? If you have not access to a certain ‘community’ (i. e. resource), how do you expect a third-party useragent to help you with that?
a nitter equivalent for telegram.
Nitter here may mean: (a) a piece of software, an HTML and RSS frontend for anonymous api.twitter.com, (b) several servers, that provide it as a service (SaaS).
As for (b), many various SaaSʼes exist out there, including some Telegram-related, but I found it inappropriate to advertise them here.
As for (a), I have never heard of one, and I am not surprised of that for the following reason. https://twitter.com is a modern ‘webapp’ written in a clean client-server manner, so writing Nitter was a task of writing alternative frontend for undocumented yet pretty stable API. While https://t.me is implemented in a more old-school fashion (it is rather akin to https://mobile.twitter.com), which on the one hand makes it perfectly usable without running ad-hoc javascripts in your browser, but on the other hand makes writing a client for it an unpleasant task, that requires parsing an output for humans.
There is quite a few free clients for non-anonymous Telegram interface, though, including the official one.
Hmmm...
I believe, it would be more productive to ask something more specific — namely, what do you what to achieve.
Lets say I would like to see if my question was asked and solved cannot as it is at
Many communities get locked behind it and I cannot access anything.
Locked behind what? If you have not access to a certain ‘community’ (i. e.
resource), how do you expect a third-party useragent to help you with that?
just like nitter or bibliogram.
As for (b), many various SaaSʼes exist out there, including some Telegram-related, but I found it inappropriate to advertise them here.
Then do not type here!
As for (a), I have never heard of one, and I am not surprised of that for the following reason. https://twitter.com is a modern ‘webapp’ written in a clean client-server manner, so writing Nitter was a task of writing alternative frontend for undocumented yet pretty stable API. While https://t.me is implemented in a more old-school fashion (it is rather akin to https://mobile.twitter.com), which on the one hand makes it perfectly usable without running ad-hoc javascripts in your browser, but on the other hand makes writing a client for it an unpleasant task, that requires parsing an output for humans.
There is quite a few free clients for non-anonymous Telegram interface, though, including the official one.
Hi all,
On 16.06.20 11:37, V F wrote:
Hmmm...
I believe, it would be more productive to ask something more specific — namely, what do you what to achieve.
Lets say I would like to see if my question was asked and solved cannot as it is at
Many communities get locked behind it and I cannot access anything.
Locked behind what? If you have not access to a certain ‘community’ (i. e.
resource), how do you expect a third-party useragent to help you with that?
just like nitter or bibliogram.
As for (b), many various SaaSʼes exist out there, including some Telegram-related, but I found it inappropriate to advertise them here.
Then do not type here!
Please calm down.
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Best Michael
V F veronicapfiorentino@gmail.com wrote:
Hmmm...
Indeed.
Many communities get locked behind it and I cannot access anything.
Locked behind what? If you have not access to a certain ‘community’ (i. e.
Yes, it seems [0] to be exactly the case, that this ‘community’ is not readable anonymously.
how do you expect a third-party useragent to help you with that?
just like nitter
Nitter wonʼt help you with that. Itʼs just a client for Twitter, not a magic wand that circumvent any access restriction.
or bibliogram.
I am not familiar with Bibliogram. If it provides you with a shared account, like, for instance, Aurora Store [1] does for Google Play, then it could help, of course; and what youʼve really meant to ask is: “Where can I get a shared credentials for Telegram?”.
I have never investigated this question: itʼs quite easy to get a temporary phone number instead, and sign up for Telegram by yourself. And, perhaps, to share you credentials afterwards to help others. ;-)