Infrastructure costs and improving SEO are recurring challenges in the e-commerce industry. Image compression is also one of them, and Tinify's API has proven to be an effective solution.

TinyPNG uses smart lossy compression techniques to reduce the file size of your WEBP, JPEG and PNG files. By selectively decreasing the number of colors in the image, fewer bytes are required to store the data. The effect is nearly invisible but it makes a very large difference in file size!


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Panda says: Excellent question! We frequently use PNG images but were frustrated with the load times. We created TinyPNG in our quest to make our websites faster and more fun to use with the best compression.

In 2014 we added intelligent compression for JPEG images and in 2016 we added support for animated PNG. Compressing images with the website is free for everyone and we like to keep it that way! If you like TinyPNG please contribute by making a donation

Our compression engine employs a smart algorithm to determine the best optimization levels tailored to each image's unique content, considering factors like colors, textures, and patterns. Unlike one-size-fits-all approaches, we understand that each image requires specific compression settings for optimal results.

Panda says: Excellent question! When you upload a JPEG file, the image is analyzed. Textures, patterns and colors are automatically identified. The encoder creates an optimally compressed JPEG file based on that information. The final result is compared with the original and fine-tuned. Distracting JPEG artifacts are minimized without big sacrifices in file size. Unnecessary metadata is stripped as well. You will get an optimal image, every time!

The TinyPNG compressor is a user-friendly tool designed for effortlessly minimizing the file size of your WebP, PNG, and JPG images. Simply drag and drop your pictures onto the web interface, and let our intelligent algorithm compress them for optimal results.

With Tinify's online optimizer, image conversion and compression are seamlessly combined into one powerful tool. Simply drag and drop your images onto the web interface, and watch as they are effortlessly converted to WebP, PNG, or JPEG. Our integrated features ensure a smooth workflow, delivering optimized images that are ready for your website.

On the other hand, Web Ultra is ideal for users desiring unlimited access to the web tool, allowing not only image compression but also the flexibility to convert images to different formats. Well-suited for those who require a comprehensive solution.

Likewise, you might have large images on your phone. These images could be taking up a lot of hard drive space and preventing you from taking more photos. Compressing them could free up more internal storage, fixing this problem.

Our tool uses lossy compression to shrink down image files. It supports three file types: PNG, JPG/JPEG, and GIF. This system intelligently analyzes uploaded images and reduces them to the smallest possible file size without negatively affecting the overall quality.

I have a survey that is used by community scientists, who need to upload photos, PDFs and excel files as part of the survey. The photos and attachments are frequently larger than 10MB. It's my understanding that ArcGIS online limits the size of attachments to feature layers to 10 MB, which limits the size of attachments that my volunteers can upload to my Survey123 form to 10MB.

At the moment, we are asking volunteers to compress their files prior to uploading them, but this is a barrier for community scientists, some of whom are not particularly tech savvy. I created the Survey in Survey123 Connect. Is there a way to set up the XLS form so that photo and file attachments would automatically be compressed when they are submitted, so that volunteers don't have to compress photos and files using a separate program prior to submitting them?

Although I'm not sure whether this only works for photos being captured within the form itself or if it also compresses images that are being attached but have been captured separately (i.e. in the camera app).

When you compress a digital file, you remove bits of information in order to reduce its overall size. There are two types of compression: lossless, which reduces the file size without reducing quality, and lossy, which reduces the size and quality.

Because of the nature of JPEG files, only lossy compression is possible with these kinds of images. However, you can control how much compression the image receives to find a comfortable balance between file size and image quality.

Yes, it is safe to upload and compress JPEG files using our online tool. There is no need to be worried about the safety of your original files because our server has no ability to delete them from your system. Any files you upload here will still remain on your computer or mobile device.

I just recently opened up my Etsy shop, and its going fine so far. Made my first sale today and I added a bunch of new listings as well. However I am scratching my head a little bit about the listing photos.

I am a hobby photographer (mostly landscape, not much into product photography before). When I looked up Etsy's Photo requirements before making product shots, it said 2000 pixels on the short side is recommended. I checked the actual photo size on the listings as they are displayed in the browser. They were all 1140 pixels wide for landscape images. Great! I thought, going to make my images exactly 1140 pixels wide to avoid any automatic compressing/resizing. -> So the customer sees the image exactly as I uploaded it.

So I resized all my product photos down to 1140 px on the wide side with compression setting of 90%. The resulting pictures were crisp clear while still having small file sizes. (100-110 KB) More than 1140 pixels wide is not really necessary. They were taken with professional equipment and I vouch that they really are crystal clear and free of visible artifacts!

After uploading I noticed that they are all mushy-mushy when viewing the listing. A far cry from the pristine pictures I exported after editing! So I downloaded one product image and lo and behold, it has the exact same resolution than the original I uploaded, but it was compressed down to 75% instead of my original 90%.

So to resume, Etsy will take the image, compress it down to 75% and then show a sized up version if a user clicks on zoom. This will of course aggravate the mushyness and make any existing artifacts worse.

I will give it a try with a higher resolution photo and see what I can come up with. My basic idea was to avoid having super large and heavy images but if Etsy will size them up regardless, I can upload big ones in the first place.

I went through our shop photos recently updating many old 800px and 1000px wide images to 3000px wide images. I didn't see much difference between old and new images on a 24 inch 1920x1200px monitor, even on the zoomed in full page display. The improved quality from a bigger image size is likely to be more noticeable on a 4k monitor. The biggest difference that I noticed was the pages now take longer to load.

All big websites compress photos these days. You should upload your files with 0 compression or 1% compression, because all big sites will be doing their own compression after they receive the file. Only compress what you need to get it below the max allowable size that will upload the file.

I have a bunch of videos in Google Photos and now I am approaching my 15GB limit. I have a few large videos that I want to keep, but wouldn't mind storing in a compressed version, but others I want to keep in higher quality. Is there a way to compress these individual videos?

now got to the workflow put the compress action give it the image url from picture upload it will compress the image, and place another action to save the use the step one body and split it as output/ and use the last item as the download url.

I would also really like to have a clear understanding from Glide about whether images uploaded by the user (my app images are 99% uploaded by user), are being compressed via Glide - I have heard that is the case directly from Glide team, but then there continues to be confusion about whether this is actually happening?

@TontonBill Regarding your image situation, are you uploading most of the images or are they user generated? As app maker, I compress all of mine using tinypng.com and it works very well - no storage problem.

I agree this is a pretty big issue, especially with the new crop of high resolution mobile phones !

The only current work-around is to tell users to first take a picture with their camera app, then choose that photo from their photo library, which (at least on iPhone) allows them to choose a down-sampled image at lower resolution.

When you upload an image via the Image Picker, it is stored exactly as you upload it. The compression/optimization happens when images are used in the app, and is done with all images, not just the ones uploaded via the Image Picker.

Our compression tool is not only easy to use but completely safe. The server that operates the tool is fully automated, so no one sees the images you upload. Also, the server automatically purges all data after 60 minutes, so anything you upload will be deleted just an hour later. This keeps your data private and secure.

I'm sending full resolution photo files to clients instead of burning them on a disc, but I want to make sure they are the full resolution. I had a client that had pictures made at Walgreens, and they were pixely..I told her not to resize them at all o her end, but now I'm wondering if they are compressed at all and no longer full resolution. If so, I need to go back to discs.

Thanks!

Someone's done some research on the images uploaded to dropbox and it appears that the images are being re-compressed upon upload. Hopefully the images on the original device aren't being harmed, too. e24fc04721

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