Please turn JavaScript on
header-image

Shortpixelblogfeed

Subscribe to Shortpixelblogfeed’s news feed.

Click on “Follow” and decide if you want to get news from Shortpixelblogfeed via RSS, as email newsletter, via mobile or on your personal news page.

Subscription to Shortpixelblogfeed comes without risk as you can unsubscribe instantly at any time.

You can also filter the feed to your needs via topics and keywords so that you only receive the news from Shortpixelblogfeed which you are really interested in. Click on the blue “Filter” button below to get started.

Website title: ShortPixel Image Optimizer – Compress & Convert to WebP & AVIF | ShortPixel

Is this your feed? Claim it!

Publisher:  Unclaimed!
Message frequency:  0.47 / day

Message History

Search has quietly changed, and most website owners haven’t caught up yet. For years, getting your images indexed meant filling in your alt text, giving files sensible names, and calling it a day. Google would crawl your page, read the metadata, and that was pretty much that. But the AI-powered crawlers running today? They’re doing […]

Read full story
If you’re building or maintaining a website with a lot of images, you already know how tedious manual optimization can get. Upload, compress, download, replace, repeat. For a handful of images it’s fine, but when you’re dealing with hundreds or thousands, it doesn’t scale. That’s where the ShortPixel CLI comes in. It’s a bash script […]

Read full story
A 3MB product photo loads just fine on your dev machine. Fast connection, no lag, looks great. Then a real user hits it on mobile, and your Core Web Vitals tank. You probably already have a compression plugin running. Maybe you’ve even converted your library to WebP. And PageSpeed still complains. That’s because the plugin […]

Read full story
If you are building an Express.js application that handles images, whether users are uploading avatars, providing image URLs, or processing local server files, you already know the drill. You have to parse the request, buffer the file, send it to an optimization service, wait for the result, and then pass it along to your storage […]

Read full story
If you store images in Amazon S3, chances are you’re paying more for bandwidth than you should. Every time someone requests an image, S3 serves the original, full resolution, uncompressed, in whatever format you uploaded. No resizing for mobile. No conversion to WebP or AVIF. Just the raw file, every single time. Multiply that by […]

Read full story