Coelacanth wrote: ↑Fri Dec 20, 2024 10:49 am
The only time I had a problem was with the Turbo Buicks forum I'm on, they had a server crash and everyone's data was lost prior to the crash. That sucked.
Part of the problem is there are too many people who can't take it upon themselves to learn how to resize and upload pictures. C'mon already, we're a quarter of the way into the 21st century!
That's a major concern of mine as well. Let's just say we're in quite the pickle with all the attachments.
Yeah, is 3mb really that small? I think the bigger problem is the super mega 4k resolution devices are automatically set at these days. When images are uploaded but then aren't used in a post and not deleted, they become what's called orphaned attachments. I have to manually purge them daily as not to accumulate. You should see how huge some of them are dimensionally. No wonder the limit is a problem for some when poster sized pics are being uploaded.
I've also
increased the size limit a few times over the years but the thing is we only have a finite amount of storage space so it's a fine line. Does anyone know the individual file size upload limits of other forums? We can then figure out the average to see where our limit fits in.
Resizing images, and reducing their file size is a pretty rudimentary task these days BUT the fact of the matter is it shouldn't be something users have to worry about doing. The entire discussion regarding the file size cap of attached images is the fault of the phpBB software developers. There is no reason why an attached image size processor shouldn't be a standard feature. People should be able to upload any sized image, and the board should then reduce it down to fit the constraints automatically. I mean that's a pretty common feature on the Internet these days. As a matter of fact, someone did create a plug-in for this board software that did just that in which we used for a period of time which was great!! Unfortunately they abandoned keeping it updated, and it stopped working with the latest board versions.