@Adam Whenever you shrink an image, you over compress it. You should try not to do that because I feel like grainy, overly compressed images don't look good. Of course, that's just my opinion :P.
@Andy You absolutely can if you want to. So what we're doing right now is going through every post (just to cover what we missed as mods before we were instated) and checking tags and comments. If the post needs something else, we'll do it.
It's also a good way to see how tags are being used and edit excerpts accordingly.
@RubyJunk The images I've been finding in posts are excessively large and often have a ton of white space in them, so I crop and resize a bit.
Is it possible to resize an image in an answer? For example, How important is PhD research topic to getting a job? has an answer that should have the image in the answer, but it's too big.
Is there a way to handle resizing?
@Adam I stumbled over it, because beside our own SE Image Uploader that let's you upload things directly from Mathematica, I implemented a hack that let's you encode source code into an imgur image for easier sharing of large code cells.
@JourneymanGeek It's just easier and faster. And if something of general interest comes up, I'm not too lazy to ask a question afterwards and give @RudraMatroja some reputation.
@JourneymanGeek @RudraMatroja Has someone a recommendation for a CPU cooler that actually fits above the RAM. I have read horrible stories of coolers that came in contact with RAM or with the rack itself because they were too large.
Right now as far as I can tell all images have to appear as inline paragraphs, left-aligned with other paragraphs.
For sites like Stack Overflow, it makes sense... images are only used when you want to illustrate something, so the image is sort of like something that they have to stop and "read"...
The questions posted in the OP are all tech support. There have been a few others since then too. It's becoming common enough that I think it's warranted
@ArtOfCode I agree on that one as well. We could wait, but I imagine that, as traffic increases, those questions are likely to increase as well. I envision random web-browsing folk happen upon the site and think "Oh! I need someone to 'recommend' a fix for my mouse, which is a piece of hardware, so this must be the right place."
We've had a few questions that follow this format:
I've bought this PRODUCT to solve MY PROBLEM. Can this PRODUCT actually do this? If so, how? If not, what do you recommend?
The most recent example is What will be the best way to connect two external monitors with macbook pro early 2010 mo...