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Black dragon viewer windlights
Black dragon viewer windlights






(My photos are generally around the 640 pixels wide mark when I post them in my blog, in case you’re curious.) I’ve noticed that many other bloggers embed their photos from Flickr, and I’ve wondered why. So, in theory, I could continue doing things as I have been, and in 3 more years, I would be nearing the 50% limit. I have been blogging for over a year, and to date I’ve used 11% of my storage limit with WordPress. Embedding PhotosĪ reason that people give for embedding photos from Flickr is that if you are using a ‘free’ blogging platform (like WordPress or Blogger), there is a limit on your storage. (For a more in-depth discussion of file types, see here.) That means, however, that I also have to spend time uploading each photo to Flickr. jpeg’s, they are not as high quality as a. There are always tradeoffs, however although you get a faster loading time from. And in this day and age of ‘immediate satisfaction,’ making people wait an extra 2 seconds for your photo to load can kill your traffic – quite literally. jpeg’s load faster than other types of files.

black dragon viewer windlights

After some research, I began resizing my photos (making them smaller) and saving them as. As I said, when I started this blog, I didn’t have a Flickr, so embedding photos from Flickr wasn’t an option. I have always uploaded my photos directly to WordPress. The discussion turned to not uploading your photos multiple times.

black dragon viewer windlights

I’m sure, however, that sometimes the way I do things isn’t the cleanest or fastest or easiest way.

black dragon viewer windlights

As I’ve gotten more into photography, I’ve added things to my workflow. When I started this blog, I didn’t have a Flickr account, and I wasn’t taking many in-world photos. Yesterday there was a discussion in a blogger group about uploading photographs to blogs and other places, like Flickr.








Black dragon viewer windlights