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luminoso
New member
Status: New idea

When attaching big images files, offer to resize them to a more acceptable dimension/size.

There were a few plugins that could do this:

- https://addons.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/addon/shrunked-image-resizer/

- https://addons.thunderbird.net/en-US/thunderbird/addon/auto-resize-image/

 

but they stopped to work once 102 was out. They also had some QA problems like:

- https://github.com/darktrojan/shrunked/issues/48

 

This kind of behavior is already seen in messaging apps like Messenger, WhatsApp, Signal, etc, where images are resized (with the option to send in its original quality).

A nice feature could be to do it also for video.

4 Comments
Status changed to: New idea
Jon
Community Manager
Community Manager

Thanks for submitting an idea to the Mozilla Connect community! Your idea is now open to votes (aka kudos) and comments.

jpurvin
New member

115.4.2 offers a way to change the size of inline images, but it's inconvenient. You need to select the inline image, click Format on the top menu, click Image Properties, click the Dimensions tab, click Custom Size, doubleclick the number in either Width or Height, change it to 1/3rd its current number (doing the math in your head, e.g. change 901 pixels to 300) then click OK. Wow, what a pain.

I suggest that the Thunderbird team emulate the way Word handles editing images. In Word, you can right click an inline image, select Size & Position and immediately be able to change either the image's height or width. 

luminoso
New member

@jpurvin this is not the inline image size. it is actually reducing the attachment size by resizing the image file.

For example, if the original resolution is 5000x5000 (5.2Mb), when the you attach and send it, it will bem 1024x1024 (300Kb) real image size

jpurvin
New member

That's interesting. Thanks. I think you and I are looking for solutions to different problems.

Whenever I paste an image into TBird now, it starts out as gigantic image so big that it exceeds the email's visible area. To make it visible to my email recipient, I either have to go through the long process described above, or drag the image's corners in repeatedly to make the image smaller. Both "solutions" do the job for me but both take quite a while to complete.

I think you and I want to see TBird offer both easier ways to make attachments smaller (your primary goal) and to make inline images within emails smaller (my primary goal).