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Releases: addyosmani/tmi

2.0.0

14 Feb 07:46
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Dropped support for Node.js 0.10 and 0.12.

1.0.0 - purified-meow

18 Jan 14:58
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TMI (Too Many Images) is a command-line tool for discovering your image weight on the web. Use it to find out where you can shave off precious bytes and what images can be optimized further.

Update

$ npm install --global tmi

Highlights

  • Bugfixes.
  • UI tweaks.
  • Update notifications.
  • More succinct readme.
  • Removed programmatic API. Use psi instead.
  • Now uses psi to talk to PageSpeed Insight.
  • Lots of internal improvements.

Changes

v0.2.2...v1.0.0

~ brought to you by Sindre and Addy

Too-Many-Images 0.2

29 Nov 14:38
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TMI 0.2 is out and with this new version we help you compare your image weight to even more data on the image weight of sites on the web. When you use the updated CLI, in addition to telling you:

  • Your image weight
  • Median site weight of images on desktop
  • Median site weight of images on mobile

We now also compare your image weight to the web's image weight quantiles. This means we summarise how you compare to sites that fall in the 25th, 50th and 75th percentiles thanks to data from Google's BigQuery.

If you're in the 90% quantile, your site is performing worse than 90% of other sites when it comes to image weight, vs. you're in the 10% quantile, your site is in the top 10% percent for image size.

Image weight is context-specific and the averages, whilst useful, don't always give you the clearest picture of where there's room for improvement. We hope our new release changes that. Below, you can see some screenshots of TMI 0.2 in action.

New look with BigQuery data:

New look if you're fast in any of the percentile comparison tests:

0.2.0 also now supports better support for humanized URLs, so you don't need to include the http portion of a URL when specifying it (this is of course, optional):

Full changelog for those interested:

Haven't used TMI before?

Install

$ npm install --global tmi

Quick start

Summary:

$ tmi <url>