Telegram Rocket Crack

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Lajuana Paling

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Aug 3, 2024, 11:25:19 AM8/3/24
to wanglinsmedef

Hey Guys, I am the idiot who wrote the terrible integration for telegram, i am obviously not a programmer but somehow managed to get this working. I am here to ask the people who actually do know what they are doing to update the telegram integration, to have more features.

The integration is working well for me. There is only one thing I have noticed and I am not sure whether this is something that could be improved or whether I am just doing (or have done) something wrong:

Hello there! Do you need promotion for your airdrop? we gonna design a crypto airdrop campaign for your crypto coin.
We can easily run an airdrop and reach the members to 50000 with our brilliant created crypto airdrop campaign
Just for 2000$

There are many methods for running an airdrop campaign, but one of the most popular is via social media. Social media platforms are excellent platforms for marketing your crypto project and getting new users to sign up.

Developing Airdrop & bounty bots for Telegram (crypto/blockchain) and other Social Networks. The bot can replace the staff of administrators, automate the answers to questions from community members, purchase tokens, launch airdrops and more.

One the our bots is Airdrop ico bot (telegram Airdrop/bounty bots): The bot mechanism is Very unique & simple, bot will be added to group, members will join on the bot. ( bot asking for email & wallet )
Then for each member who invited by members in the group, they will receive 1 point. At the end results will exported in XLS file.
After completion of campaign your team can change the points to desire Exchange rate to your tokens.

1) The company announces the start of the campaign on social media and other channels.
2) The company announces the end date of the campaign and provides instructions on how to get tokens.
3) Users who have completed the tasks will receive tokens in their wallets.

Hand-built paper rockets soared into the sky propelled by air; eggs cocooned in bubble wrap, rubber bands and paper packaging plunged from an East Central Energy bucket truck to the ground; children mixed handfuls of sparkling slime; they hammered together wooden projects; and they dug trenches through sand to help rubber ducks travel downstream.

In front of the school, free bike helmets were handed out and fitted to students by volunteer firefighters from the towns of Superior and Oakland. Chicka received a $2,250 grant from Essentia Health to purchase helmets for every student at the school. The children rode through a bike rodeo course laid out by Douglas County Sheriff Matt Izzard and some of the office's deputies.

The Angara A5 lifted off April 11 on its fourth orbital test launch, and its first from the Vostochny Cosmodrome in Russia's far east. The 179-foot-tall (54.5 meters) rocket is produced entirely from Russian components and uses a more environmentally friendly fuel than the nation's previous heavy-lift rocket, the Proton-M.

"The rocket worked according to plan," Roscosmos said in a Telegram post after the launch. "This launch kicks off flight design tests of the Amur space rocket with Angara heavy-lift launch vehicles at Vostochny."

The launch came after a scrubbed attempt on April 9 and a delayed second attempt on April 10. This marks the fourth time Roscosmos has launched the Angara A5. Its first test flight took place in 2014, and its second in 2020.

"The creation of the Angara space rocket complex (KRK) is a task of special national importance," Roscosmos said, according to Reuters. "The commissioning of the Angara spacecraft will allow Russia to launch spacecraft of all types from its territory and provide our country with independent guaranteed access to space."

The experimental cubesat launched into orbit aboard the Angara A5, known as Gagarinets, will be used to verify a laser system that is designed to project images such as QR codes or advertisements in the night sky, according to Avant Space.

The company claims that a constellation of satellites orbiting around 300 to 372 miles (500 to 600 kilometers) high will be able to project images visible even in cities with high light pollution. These artificial sky sights will be visible to millions for up to three to five minutes, according to Avant Space.

Brett is curious about emerging aerospace technologies, alternative launch concepts, military space developments and uncrewed aircraft systems. Brett's work has appeared on Scientific American, The War Zone, Popular Science, the History Channel, Science Discovery and more. Brett has English degrees from Clemson University and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. In his free time, Brett enjoys skywatching throughout the dark skies of the Appalachian mountains."}), " -0-10/js/authorBio.js"); } else console.error('%c FTE ','background: #9306F9; color: #ffffff','no lazy slice hydration function available'); Brett TingleySocial Links NavigationManaging Editor, Space.comBrett is curious about emerging aerospace technologies, alternative launch concepts, military space developments and uncrewed aircraft systems. Brett's work has appeared on Scientific American, The War Zone, Popular Science, the History Channel, Science Discovery and more. Brett has English degrees from Clemson University and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. In his free time, Brett enjoys skywatching throughout the dark skies of the Appalachian mountains.

The house of a pastor in the Donetsk region of Eastern Ukraine was destroyed by a February 15 rocket strike, but the church building attached to the house remained intact and the pastor and his family are safe and eager to continue their ministry, reports Voice of the Martyrs Korea.

The Islamic Resistance in Iraq, an Iran-backed joint operations group of Iraqi militias, released a series of statements and video footage claiming rocket and drone attacks on U.S. military personnel in Syria and Iraq, as well as on Israeli sites in the days that followed.

The statement read: "In continuation of our resistance to the American occupation forces in Iraq and the region, and in response to the massacres of the Zionist entity [Israel] against our people in Gaza, the mujahideen of the Islamic Resistance in Iraq attacked a base of the occupation in the Conoco field deep inside Syria with a barrage of rockets, hitting the target. The Islamic Resistance stresses that it will continue to crush the enemy's strongholds." [1]

Also on December 29, 2023, the group claimed a rocket attack against a U.S. base in Al-Shaddadi, in Syria's Al-Hasakah governorate, and a drone attack against a U.S. base in Harir, north of Erbil, in Iraq's Kurdistan region. A low-quality, 26-second video was attached, documenting the launch of the drone.[2]

On December 30, 2023, the group claimed a drone attack against the Harir base.[3] The next day, December 31, 2023, a statement was released claiming drone attacks against a U.S. base in the town of Rmelan, located in the countryside of Qamishli, in Syria's Al-Hasakah Governorate.

In addition, on December 31, the group claimed it launched drones to attack a U.S. base near the Erbil International Airport, in Iraq's northern Kurdistan region. A 50-second video was attached to the December 31 claim, documenting the launch of the drone towards Erbil in daylight.[4]

On January 1, 2024, the Islamic Resistance in Iraq claimed it had carried out an attack on the Al-Shaddadi base, using drones.[7] An additional statement, also dated January 1, declared that the "occupation base" in the Conoco gas and oil field was targeted by a barrage of rockets.[8]

On January 2, 2024, the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, an Iran-backed joint operations group of Iraqi militias, released a statement claiming responsibility for a rocket attack targeting the U.S. base in Al-Shaddadi area, in Syria's Al-Hasakah Governorate.[10]

On January 2, 2024, the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, an Iran-backed joint operations group of Iraqi militias, released a statement claiming responsibility for a drone attack targeting the U.S. base in Al-Malikiyah area, northeastern Al-Hasakah Governorate, Syria. The group released a short clip documenting the launch of drones.[11]

In northern Iraq, the group released a statement on January 2 claiming responsibility for a drone attack the same day targeting the U.S. base near Erbil Airport, in northern Iraq's Kurdistan region.[13]


Since mid-October, the Islamic Resistance in Iraq has claimed more than a hundred assaults on U.S. bases in Iraq and Syria, and on Israeli targets in Eilat and the Golan Heights, in response to the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas and the U.S.'s strengthening support of Israel.[14]

The most recent example came via a so-called war correspondent Telegram channel, which posted images on Saturday purporting to show North Korea-made rockets used by Russian forces near the Ukrainian city of Kherson.

As soon as news of the April 4 attacks broke, imagery emerged showing the scale of destruction. Locals shared videos and images on social media. These sources indicate that most casualties that day appeared to be concentrated in the commercial area where people had been working and shopping. There was also a public transit stop at this location.

Security footage from the paediatric hospital first appeared online the day after the attack on the Telegram channel of Governor Vitaly Kim, who shared it at 13:58 (local time). It was then widely amplified by the channel of the local branch of Suspilne, a Ukrainian media network. The video showed that the submunitions, which detach from the launch rocket close to impact and spray over a target area, hit the hospital at around 15:30, according to the timestamp of the CCTV camera. On April 8 Chief Doctor Oleksandr Plitkin told reporters for the TPK channel that nobody at the hospital was harmed physically, but that the hospital building did take exterior damage, of which photojournalists from NPR also published photographs.

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