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Why I Prefer Browser-Local Image Resizing for Small Files

When a form asks for an image under 100KB, the obvious reaction is to search for an online compressor and upload the file. That works, but it also adds an unnecessary privacy decision: does this image need to leave the device at all? A simpler workflow For ID photos, screenshots, receipts, and other personal images, I prefer tools that do the work locally in the browser. The browser reads the file, resizes or recompresses it, and gives the result back without sending the original to a remote server. My practical process is: Start with the original JPG, PNG, or WebP. Set the required maximum size rather than guessing a quality percentage. Keep the aspect ratio unless the destination specifies exact dimensions. Preview the result at normal size, especially around text and faces. Save the new file under a different name so the original remains untouched. Why target size matters A generic “compress” button may produce a smaller file, but not necessarily one that meets a strict upload limit. A target-size workflow is more useful because it can adjust dimensions and quality together. For many document portals, a visually clean 80–95KB result is safer than a 99.9KB result that may fail after metadata is added. PNG is excellent for flat graphics and screenshots, while JPG is often better for photos. WebP can be efficient, but some older upload forms still accept only JPG or PNG. The destination's rules should decide the output format. The tool I use I built Resize Image around this browser-local approach. It is useful when I need a quick image under a specific size and do not want the original uploaded as part of the resizing process. The link is included for context and disclosure: I am the maker. Local processing does not remove every privacy concern—you should still review the downloaded result and the site where you eventually upload it—but it reduces one unnecessary transfer. The larger lesson is simple: for lightweight image work, the browser is already capable enough

2026-07-15 原文 →
开发者

The Motorola Edge 70 Max is all about power

Motorola has launched the Edge 70 Max, its latest flagship phone that's designed for power intensive tasks like streaming video and mobile gaming. Alongside having a huge battery and rapid wired charging support, the Motorola Edge 70 Max is the first Android phone to support full 25W wireless Qi2 charging since Google launched the Pixel […]

2026-07-15 原文 →
AI 资讯

Show HN: Leet Robotics: Learn robotics and ROS2 with hands-on courses

Hi all, I've just launched Leet Robotics: a platform to learn robotics hands-on, with a full ROS2 workspace that runs in the browser (Jazzy, Gazebo Harmonic, Foxglove, VS Code) - no install required. The platform also has room for sharing projects and simulation assets as it grows. Our first course is live now: Intro to ROS2 (free to read). The course teaches skills ranging from building your first node to a capstone project of a robot touring a museum world, with every lesson runnable in the on

2026-07-15 原文 →
AI 资讯

Home Depot’s 12-foot viral skeleton now talks

The Home Depot is once again upgrading its 12-foot-tall skeleton to help keep the viral piece of Halloween decor popular as spooky season creeps closer. Skelly is borrowing some of the tech introduced in the smaller 6.5-foot Ultra Skelly last year, including letting you speak through the skeleton's moving mouth using a mobile app. The […]

2026-07-15 原文 →