Forum Moderators: not2easy
Found a setting today which lets you specify the maximum file size and/or minimum quality you are willing to put up with. That setting will help with your bandwidth and load times.
although i see it is $60
it works great for me and what i like is that it has a very good 2 pane optimiser where you can see very clearly the changes as you lower the jpeg quality or decrease the colors in a gif.
for me easier than fireworks or photoshop, but maybe because i'm more familiar with it... its like a great grafics optimiser for a non grafics person...
doubtless someone here will be able to recommend a free app that is just as good?
I ran a batch processing routine and created a thumb, medium and large size for each of the 140 pics in about 15 minutes total. Very impressive piece of software and you have quite a bit of control over the routines.
And then I uploaded them to the clients website, opened up my FP editor and used the Photo Gallery plugin to create a page with thumbs that linked to the larger images so the client could preview the quality. All this in a period of 30 minutes or less.
I'd like to know of any affordable programs that can do this optimization...
I saw this post yesterday, and I didn't respond because I was sure someone else would give the same answer I did. Since it hasn't been mentioned yet...
IrfanView is freeware. Affordable as it gets. It can act in batch mode, you just have to know the command line parameters. Set it once to the compression level that you want, then run a batch on a whole directory. I can't vouch for how 'pretty' the results are, but you might want to try it first. I think it ranks as the most inexpensive of all mentioned so far.
P.S.
Set it as your default viewer for .jpg, .gif, etc files. No overhead like photoshop to just start up the software. Simple stuff like cropping, resizing - very easy. Even if you have some of the Pro stuff, I'd recommend it just as a simple cropper/resizer/viewer. It can co-reside with everything.
Photoshop does it all and optimization is just one of the things it does (fairly well I should add).
I just wanted to clarify this in case there are people not very knowledgeable about graphics software reading this.
[hitboxcentral.com...]
Give it a page, navigate to the Summary Load Time page. It'll list the images. Click an imaage name to see it at different byte sizes.