FotoPress Review

16
Posted February 16, 2016 by in

Rating

Price
 
 
 
 
 


Concept
 
 
 
 
 


Execution
 
 
 
 
 


Value
 
 
 
 
 


Total Score
 
 
 
 
 

3.5/ 5

Creator: Ankur Shukla
 
Type: WordPress plugin
 
 

POS:

Improves WordPress's poor image functionality
 

NEG:

Some GUI issues
 

Today Im doing a review of a new WordPress plugin called FotoPress Anyone who has a blog or WordPress website knows that one thing you will for sure need is images. Posts without images are boring, they look overly long, and they don’t keep the users attention. People are visual creatures and you for sure […]

by Brett Rutecky
Full Article

Today Im doing a review of a new WordPress plugin called FotoPress

Anyone who has a blog or WordPress website knows that one thing you will for sure need is images. Posts without images are boring, they look overly long, and they don’t keep the users attention. People are visual creatures and you for sure should have some visuals for them to look at on all your blog posts or website pages.

The problem is that WordPress has very limited image functionality. You can upload an image but beyond that there is little more you can do. You cant edit an image, you cant add text or crop it. Even worse you need to actually have an image in the first place.

Unless you have a huge library of images just sitting on your hard drive what you will find yourself doing when you need one is something similar to this. You head over to Google and start searching for an image in the image search tab. Then you look through all of the search results trying to find one that both looks good, and that is not water marked or copyrighted. Once you finally find one you download it to your computer. Then you use an image editor to resize it, crop it, add any effects or text and save again. Finally when all that is done you can upload it to WordPress and use it in your post.

FotoPress aims to solve these problems my making this entire process happen quickly, and right inside of WordPress itself. To start off with it adds a special FotoPress button inside of the WordPress WYSIWYG editor.

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Clicking that button will then give you the option to pull images from your computer, from your Youzign account if your a Youzign user or to search for images. Of these three options the most useful for many people is going to be the image search functionality.

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You can search for images on Pixabay, Flickr, Open Clip Art, or Instagram.  You can also tell the search to only find images that do not require attribution (credit to the author) and that are licensed as free to modify if you like. In my testing, searching Pixabay only the plugin found 500 results for my search in about a second or two.

Once you select the image you want you can then insert it into your post as it is, or you can edit it. I think most people are going to want to edit it. At the very least your going to want to resize the image and possibly crop it. Fortunately FotoPress is not just an image search tool. Its also an image editor.

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Besides being able to crop and resize you can also add PhotoShop like effects, text, other images, shapes or free hand drawings to your image.

On thing I did notice that I didn’t like was the user interface when you are  resizing. You have two options, you can use a slider or you can enter the size you want in an input field. Both of these options had issues though.

With the slider it will show fractional sizes. For example in one of my tests I used the slider to resize the image and at one point it showed 700.8 pixels wide. Well there is no such thing as 8/10ths of a pixel. There should have been automatic rounding on the display. This is a basic oversight that I was surprised to see them miss.

With the input field you can enter the size you want manually. However there was no sanitation. The system expects you to enter numbers but it allows you to enter letters as well. For example I entered “650Brett” as the width in a test. This is obviously not correct. The plugin should have sanitization that prevents people from entering letters in a input field that expects numbers only.

Both of these things are very basic errors on the developers part and while neither of them breaks the plugin I personally think they where kind of amateurish mistakes. These things are the reason I rated FotoPress 3 stars for execution as opposed to the 4 starts it probably should have gotten.

Despite these errors though I found FotoPress to be a solid software, that makes the process of finding, editing, and adding an image to your blog posts or WordPress pages a lot more easy. It just makes sense to have this functionality right inside of WordPress.

While FotoPress is not some hype get rich product it is in fact a good software. A good software is a practical tool that makes your life easier. Thats what FotoPress does, it saves you time, and makes a task that you would normally be a pain to do much easier.

UPDATE: The product vendor has read my review, and informed me that based on my feedback he has fixed the GUI issues I described in it!

approved

 

 

 

 

 

 A quick note about the reviews I do on this site. The product vendors give me access to their products for free in order for me to do my review. However I make no promises to them regarding the results of my tests or what I will write in my review. Should you click a link that takes you to a sales page for a paid product for sale this link will be an affiliate link and I will be paid a percentage of the sales price should you decide to invest in it.


About the Author

Brett Rutecky

Brett Rutecky is a full time online marketer, web developer, and entrepreneur. He has developed scores of Facebook apps, dozens of custom web sites and hundreds of scripts.

16 Comments


  1.  
    Michael Gorman

    Thorough review & nicely explained-i like how you mentioned the pedigree of the software and made practical suggestions 🙂




  2.  
    Arav

    This plugin was released some time ago under the name of Canvakala.
    It does exact the same as Fotopress.
    Just a re-release under a different name.




    •  

      .. yep, as I said in the video review .. not sure its a bad thing that they re-released something though, its not like everyone in the world bought it the first time. You cant complain when things ‘vanish’ AND when things keep getting sold. I personally think its a good sign when vendors keep selling their products and dont let them fade away into nothing as soon as the launch is over. Canvakala is no longer for sale, it has been rebranded as FotoPress.




  3.  

    Essentially it is, I did mention that in the video review FYI.




  4.  
    Jami

    Has anyone noticed this plugin MAJORLy slows down your site? What happens to images if I uninstall the plugin?




    •  

      I have not noticed any performance degradation, also as an developer with a lot of experience in WordPress coding I can say that that it makes no sense to think that a plugin like this would slow down your site, since its not something that ‘hooks’ into your site, that is it only runs when your using it, I think most likely your issue is your hosting. If you uninstall the plugin nothing happens to your images.




  5.  
    Rajesh

    Brett, thanks for the detailed review. Wanted to know if there is any membership plugin using which I can give this option to members of my website.




  6.  
    Stacey

    Oh, I have CanvaKala. Wonder if I get upgraded to PhotoPress.




  7.  
    Andrei

    Hi Brett! Can you please tell me what review plugin do you use? or please give me a link to buy it! Thanks!




  8.  
    Gwen

    What are the OTO




    •  

      No idea, I do not review OTO’s normally because I strongly feel that a purchase decision should be based on the merit of the FE offer. Either its a good value or its not. Really that is the only consideration for a buyer at this point.





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