gwennie-chan posted:
omnscient0
Admin posted:
Huh, that's interesting. I thought I'd worked the quote tag issues in the Thingifier out long ago. Guess I'll have to make a note for the next version for when I finally stop procrastinating on it. (A ground-up rewrite using all the stuff I've learned since I first wrote the script is going to be a fairly large time sink, especially with some of the planned improvements and changes, lol.)
As a scanlation group editor (for multiple groups), I can tell you that the optimization for images varies wildly from group to group. Programs used and their implementations vary and the groups usage of those programs and implementations also varies, causing complexity.
Yeah, agreed on this. It seems to wildly vary depending on the technical skills of the person packaging the release or, if they don't deal with that part of the final release, the cleaner or typesetter. And a lot of people aren't terribly aware of some of the image profiles that can be used to save space while not affecting visual quality.
Anyway, back to optimization for the images. It's also important to note that the older the images are, the more likely they are to be unoptimized, just due to the nature of technology and programming. So maybe selectively do newer stuff, but overhaul the older assets we have?
It's also more likely to be an issue with images from the images section or with full color covers as well.
You're right about the resolution. Some people use 1024 x 768 screens while others view the website on their 4K monitors and TVs. There should probably be a set standard for website resolution and then if people want the gigantic ones, just link them to the releasers zips and stuff?
Setting a standard for the website version probably wouldn't be a bad idea, though trying to force it would probably not go over terribly well unless the people that deal with uploads also deal with that part themselves/it's automated on the server. (Though that latter option would include increased load for the server.) Few pc users have anything over a 1440px tall view and even then it shouldn't be an enormous issue just to scale it up using CSS or something. The majority of those few users with such a high resolution monitor would likely not really notice it. Anything over 1200px is probably unnecessary for the web view with the exception of ones with really long pages such as Their Story.