![]() For now, it only works for Instagram, but he has plans to add Twitter support as well as a layer of facial recognition in the future, so you could potentially only like pictures that include your friend (or significant other’s) face instead of everything in their timeline.Īnother good option: just setting up notifications for when your friend posts. Its creator, gulzar 1996, created it as a way to auto-like his girlfriend’s posts. The bot is available as a free download on Github. The idea here is to avoid a “Why didn’t you like X” conversation when you’re super busy, not entirely remove yourself from the equation. And you should absolutely look at that post ASAP rather than make someone think you saw (and liked) something you didn’t. When the like is sent, you’ll get a message in Slack letting you know it happened so you can actually check out the post yourself. With it, you set things up to auto-like a particular user’s posts. ![]() ![]() While he isn’t using a bot, I discovered this week there’s actually one out there for Instagram. He takes my tweets as an opportunity to take a short break, and clicks through the notification to see what I wrote and in most cases like it. Turns out, he had actually set up a notification so he gets a pop-up on his desktop when I tweet something new. He’s fast, and after the first month or so of his quick-draw likes I remember asking him if he was using a bot to just blindly like my posts. ![]()
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