![]() Reduce can resize images as well as decrease their quality to make them more suitable for mobile uploads/sharing. Opening and closing albums, enlarging previews, opening menus – the animations aren’t terribly slow, but there’s something off about them. The album animation immediately shows one area where I believe Reduce could be better: animations feel a bit slow. 2 Reduce starts with a page showing available iOS albums as stacks of photos tap on one, and the stack expands to reveal the photos inside it, displayed in a grid with the newest ones on top (a nice touch). It doesn’t have any sharing option and the only location where it can save new images is the Camera Roll. Reduce is close to excellence when it comes to the first one.ĭeveloped by Tobias Wiedenmann, Reduce is a $1.99 Universal app to batch resize images with presets. My “ideal” batch resizing photo app for iOS would excel in two different aspects: it would be Universal and have an elegant interface to pick multiple photos at once to batch resize them with presets it would come with a plethora of sharing options built-in, including Cloud Files and SFTP support. 1 The latest Pythonista update made things dramatically better with the Photos module, but I still can’t pick multiple photos at once (and, obviously, I still have to deal with Python). My iOS screenshot workflow is faster thanks to Pythonista and the Hazel script running on the Mac mini, but I miss the possibility of having a single app capable of batch resizing and uploading images to Rackspace Cloud Files. This is what I’ve been using in combination with some Pythonista scripts that would resize screenshots for me. When we decided to move 4 years of image uploads off the FTP and onto a CDN (alongside new uploads on a daily basis), I asked our Don Southard to create a Hazel script that would monitor Dropbox for screenshots and upload them to the CDN. In spite of that, however, I kept using OneEdit to resize multiple screenshots at once, save them to the Camera Roll, fire up Diet Coda, and move them to our FTP server. The downside is that the app’s interface is clunky and convoluted, with seemingly no intention from the developer to update it. ![]() For screenshots, the story is a bit more complicated.įor months, I used OneEdit, an iPhone/iPad app to batch resize images from the Camera Roll OneEdit comes with a lot of features, including presets, Dropbox sharing, and FTP uploads. In particular useful if you need to add new photos to your product catalog, or your web shop, and you want to keep the same look and feel of the already present pictures.I deal with two types of images on my iOS devices: photos and screenshots.įor photos, I’ve long settled on a Dropbox-based workflow that takes care of automatically archiving and sorting photos for me. You can apply all this features one by one as you browse through your photos, but the main strength of piQtility is to apply it batchwise! Settings can be stored in presets, which makes it very easy to reus.
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