

I’m not into victim-blaming, but that’s on them for being on the Epic Store.
Let’s see what this Fediverse thing is all about.
I’m not into victim-blaming, but that’s on them for being on the Epic Store.
Nah they’re just scared of becoming disabled veterans.
Now, let’s not devolve into mass lysteria.
You’re welcome, glad I could be of some help!
Okay, here’s what I’ve found.
First of all, I use vanilla Firefox on windows 10, only extensions installed are AdBlockPlus and Privacy Badger, but even with those turned off and Firefox’s own Tracking Protection set to Standard instead of Strict doesn’t change the result. However, what I had missed is that ICO is the only conversion that works: it’ll take about a minute instead of the couple of seconds of the other cases, generate a file with huge size confronted with the original, but it will let you download an ICO file.
Tried it on Edge, and every conversion works normally. The no-extension quirk for the Default option is still there, though.
This is what the Firefox console shows, from page load to the end of the conversion:
Input file: File` { name: “sample2.heic”, lastModified: 1750180660057, webkitRelativePath: “”, size: 351970, type: “” } compression.js:43:11 File type is HEIC: image/heic utilities.js:7:13 Input image file size: 0.336 MB compression.js:144:11 Settings: Object { maxSizeMB: “0.336”, initialQuality: 0.8, maxWidthOrHeight: undefined, useWebWorker: true, onProgress: options(p), preserveExif: false, fileType: “image/webp”, libURL: “./browser-image-compression.js”, alwaysKeepResolution: true, signal: AbortSignal } compression.js:161:11 Preprocessing HEIC image… compression.js:186:11 Optimizing “sample2.heic” (0%) compression.js:119:13 Optimizing “sample2.heic” (5%) compression.js:119:13 Optimizing “sample2.heic” (10%) compression.js:119:13 Optimizing “sample2.heic” (15%) compression.js:119:13 Optimizing “sample2.heic” (20%) compression.js:119:13 Optimizing “sample2.heic” (25%) compression.js:119:13 Optimizing “sample2.heic” (30%) compression.js:119:13 Optimizing “sample2.heic” (99%) compression.js:119:13 Post-processing… compression.js:223:11 New image extension: webp utilities.js:144:11
Mine was mainly a joke, but I thought first of MAGAs instead of just TERFs (they almost overlap though IMO) because they would be the ones to dedicate all the time, energy and alt accounts to attack trans even here.
Arent’t we using one at the moment?
But if Nazis invented the trans, then MAGA should be in favour of them…
Nobody told you ---- was gonna be this wayy… Pa-pa-pa-pap
No, not in a new tab. I meant “display” as “it’s shown in the processed images list”. I upload the heic image, it gets read and compressed, and appears in the processed images list, as it should. But when I click the download button, I get the Firefox dialog to download a jpeg image, and if I proceed, I DO download a jpeg image. Regardless of the conversion format chosen.
(Other little quirk, if “Convert to” is set to JPEG, PNG, webP or ICO, the converted image will be shown in the processed list with the corresponding extension, but if set to Default, it’ll show as FILENAME. without extension)
Gave it a try by unzipping and running from local index.html, and fed it a 4000*3000 HEIC photo (converting that kind of pics when someone sends them to me would be my main use case) but it has this weird bug that, no matter what format I select, it takes like a couple seconds to convert, it displays that an image of the selected format is ready, but when I click the button it presents a jpeg pic to download. Same happens on mazanoke.com Using Firefox 139 on win10 if that helps.
I agree, but don’t think that some tons of scrap metal can pay for millions of damages.
I thought so too, but can we really tell the difference?
I wouldn’t be so sure, given how many leopard-eaten and Pikachu faces you see around, even among those who should know better.
‘Sphere’ and ‘Navigator’ come to mind…
Wait what, last I knew it hadn’t even started yet.
“Accelerated Christian Education” sounds a lot like the kind of brainwashing you’d see in a Marvel comic, with helmet and restraints.
In some circles it’s called “truck-kun”.
Or, the patrol cars stopped circling his house.
The not easily replaceable battery shortened that time for a lot of users.