Where can I upload images and files for use on MATLAB Answers?
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Walter Roberson
le 21 Mai 2011
Commenté : Walter Roberson
le 23 Oct 2015
Where can I upload images and files for use on MATLAB Answers?
When you do upload, please use .zip files instead of .rar or .bzip or .7zip, as some systems cannot handle the other formats.
None of the following are officially supported by Mathworks, but they are some of the sites that people have found convenient to use.
One site per Answer, please, so people can comment about individual sites.
6 commentaires
Jan
le 28 Avr 2012
We have 32'000 questions in this forum. A lot of them contain pictures, which are hosted on a bunch of servers and internet services. Non of them is officially supported by MathWorks. Whenever such a picture is deleted, the corresponding question and all its answers becomes meaningless. Therefore hosting the pictures on a MathWorks server is very important. In addition I really hate to be forwarded to ugly pages, which force me to enable JavaScript and overwhelm me with commercials.
The current strategy is equivalent to this policy:
After about a year a few important sentences are deleted from about 5% of the messages.
But this is obviously counterproductive in a forum, which was announced as a stable database for solutions. Therefore I boycott this thread: I do not vote for any of the mentioned services, because they are all insufficient workarounds for a problem, TMW could solve in minutes.
Réponse acceptée
Jan
le 21 Sep 2013
The problem has been solved ultimately by TMW: You can store the pictures directly on the forum's servers now.
4 commentaires
Plus de réponses (18)
Jan
le 23 Mai 2011
My favourite: http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange ! I've used a link to a screenshot of one of my FEX submissions.
Every upload service in the internet must produce profit. Otherwise it will be closed very soon. Forwarding the traffic from this forum to any foreign service must support an obscure money making practice. Therefore I strongly suggest: Ask files@mathworks to disable Google-Analytics and to allow storing pictures on a Matlab server.
Gurudatha Pai
le 14 Juin 2011
I would put the files on my personal website or dropbox public folder and share a link ( http://www.dropbox.com). In both case, I would have total control over the content and both would not require registration and will stay there as long as I wish them to be there.
3 commentaires
James
le 23 Août 2011
Dropbox are a widely-trusted service for filesharing. The publically viewable folders are, when setup, very easy to use (with files of any size - a major constraint on many imageuploaders), as you simply drop the file into the appropriate folder on your computer and give the url to whoever needs it.
It's legal-speak, but basically Dropbox are covering their backs, so that if you put/broadcast something online using their service and someone else takes it (as they can easily do) nothing comes back to bite Dropbox. They claim are for non-commercial use, as any business that misuses your content for commercial use is an actual target that can be sued, unlike anonomous individuals on the web.
But, if it needs protected, why would you put it on the internet publically anyway?
Paul T John
le 27 Août 2011
Every file (say, a .zip file) in the public folder of Dropbox has a public link. It can be copied and pasted anywhere. When another person (need not be a Dropbox user) clicks the link, the .zip file is downloaded into the person's computer. The link is valid till the person who uploaded it decides them to stay there. He/she can even update the folder and the link would still be valid, provided the file-name is not changed.
Oleg Komarov
le 21 Mai 2011
Supports resizing image to a particular size at time of upload.
No registration necessary to upload images.
4 commentaires
Image Analyst
le 6 Juin 2011
Isn't it this way on all "free" hosting sites, and even many pay sites? Which free site doesn't assume these rights for themselves?
Sean de Wolski
le 23 Mai 2011
Upload house
- Makes it very easy to give a link directly to an image and to embed an image in an Answers post.
- No registration necessary.
- Allows for resizing on load
- Allows for password protection
This website does occasionally have highly inappropriate advertisements, but those are invisible to others as long as you embed the image in a post here.
3 commentaires
Sean de Wolski
le 7 Juin 2011
IA, does that mean you can't see images in Answers that are just pulling an image from UploadHouse? Such as my second post in this thread:
http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/7394-find-pixel-coordinates-value-of-a-centroid
?
Arnaud Miege
le 23 Mai 2011
I use my own Picasa Web Album. It takes a bit of work to link just the picture as opposed to the web page it's located on, but as it's my own album, I'm in relative control of the content - unless that is, Google suddenly decides to remove the contents.
Image Analyst
le 7 Jan 2013
Here is a very easy one for uploading images: snaggy: http://snag.gy/ You can copy a screen shot (using alt-printscreen), or copy a file from Windows Explorer (or whatever, using control-C), then goto snaggy and simply type control-v.
Advantages: easy to upload files via pasting, no registration required for anyone who uploads or downloads, one URL (versus having to choose from multiple different types on some other web sites), downloader can see image immediately with no additional clicks.
Disadvantages: it converts the image to jpeg so you may get jpeg artifacts.
3 commentaires
Image Analyst
le 28 Jan 2013
Or Internet Explorer (which I just tested). I have not tested others (Safari, Opera, etc.).
Sean de Wolski
le 28 Jan 2013
For me, on IE8, it wanted to run a Java Applet, which with the recent security issues....
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