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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)LE
Posts
6
Comments
35
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Thanks a bunch from sharing your result! Based on the fact that ICO works, and I didn't see any real issues in the logs, it could be the "Post-processing..." part where something goes wrong (I didn't add any more detailed logs for that part unfortunately).

    Will get back once I've setup a basic Windows development environment and made some tests!

  • Based off the things you mentioned, especially the "little quirk", there something in the pipeline that fails. The file name extension is intended to show regardless of which output format that is selected.

    Are you perhaps using a privacy-focused browser like Librewolf (opposed to vanilla Firefox)? Or do you have any extension that might be used for anti-fingerprinting? MAZANOKE need to be able to access the browser's canvas feature in order to convert images, and some browsers are blocking this feature to prevent fingerprinting.

    Also, have you tested MAZANOKE on a different browser to see if it works there?

    If the issue still persist, would you mind sending me a screenshot of the browser console log, in order for me to see where it fails. This will hopefully provide some hints.

    Additionally, while I don't have a Windows environment readily available, I've tested MAZANOKE on Ubuntu and macOS using both firefox and chromium, but I wasn't able to reproduce it. Will test on Windows when I find the chance to.

  • Thanks for your kind words, I tried putting some effort into making the interface a bit more fun and interactive, so thanks for noticing!

    In regards to Rust, I've been interested in learning more about it, but I've not had time yet, so it's been in a "soon (tm)" limbo. As I'm comfortable with JavaScript/JS frameworks, sticking with JS was a quick way to get started without much friction.

  • To preface a bit. I occasionally run my images through Sharp over CLI, and I am also a daily user of the Caesium desktop app. However, I haven't explored the details of how Caesium is implemented.

    The biggest difference is that MAZANOKE targets a different user group, essentilly those who would use online tools over installing applications, which is something you see more of these days. I wanted my family and friends to have a safe drop-in replacement for those shady websites. For those who want to use a "native app", installing MAZANOKE as a PWA is also a great option.

    In terms of core functionality, they are very similar and support the same output image formats. But at the end of the day, MAZANOKE is privacy-focused too, and have plans to add a simple image editor for obfuscation, cropping, and related features. You can also access MAZANOKE anywhere, whether it is self-hosted or on the official instance.

    Fundamentally, MAZANOKE relies heavily on the device, and the browser's Canvas API. This means that the speed and quality could slightly differ depending on which device/browser you use. I believe Caesium's performance would be more consistent.

    (I didn't know where to put this, but my favorite feature is being able to paste to compress an image right away using MAZANOKE.)

    Edit: typo

  • Yes, it's all JavaScript and essentially relies on the Canvas API to compress the images, so the performance is heavily dependent of your device and browser. I haven't delved into WASM yet, but it would indeed open up doors for improvements, such a more file format support and more intelligent optimization. At the moment, working with canvas keeps things a lot more straightforward, however.

    There is no funding I can provide at all (I've received 2 donations so far, which I'm very grateful for!). I just do this on my spare time, which I have a lot less of these days. I initially created MAZANOKE as a drop-in replacement for family and friends, specifically to those who tend to use questionable or ad-bloated online tools.

  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    MAZANOKE v1.1.5: Self-hosted local image optimizer in your browser — now supports TIFF, ICO, basic auth (featured on Tailscale, LINUX Unplugged, Selfh.st)

  • As a Lemmy user myself, I totally get the sentiment. GitHub isn’t ideal, and I had also considered Codeberg in the past (not for this project, but way back for others). Unfortunately, the simple reason is that the community is already on there, which makes getting contributions and engagement much easier. Managing and tracking issues across two platforms would be quite (mentally) taxing, which is on top of the effort already going into developing the app.

  • I'm glad to hear it's being used frequently! I've heard a similar, but not exactly the same use case, so I recommend submitting a feature request on GitHub. That way, I can review it later to assess if the feature could be included when I plan ahead for new releases.

  • EXIF data is removed by default, at the moment, there's no way to keep those data. I personally see that more as a feature than a bug though. The primary reason why there is no option to keep EXIF data is to maintain feature parity across different image formats.

  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    MAZANOKE v1.1.0: Self-hosted local image optimizer in your browser — now supports HEIC, clipboard paste, and more

  • Even though this squoosh instance seems to be selfhosted, it has Google Analytics tracking (since Google made this app). MAZANOKE does not include any tracking nor require any internet connection at all if you install it as a PWA.

    Edit: Looked at the source code of the fork, and it is applying the same tracking ID (to the big G). As squoosh is apache2 licensed, from my understanding, they should be able to simply remove that off the fork?

  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    MAZANOKE update (image optimizer via browser): Batch upload and download

    Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    MAZANOKE: A self-hosted local image compressor that runs in your browser

    Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Browse and watch videos in FreshRSS like it's YouTube: "Youlag theme/extension" (v3.0.2)

    Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Browse FreshRSS like YouTube: "Youlag Theme for FreshRSS"