While we have generally encountered no problems with images hosted on ServImg, a member of my forum reported that there are a couple of ServImg-hosted images that he cannot view. So far, the problem seems limited only to him and only to these couple of images, but it is something that should be resolved and that might affect others, whether on my forum or other Forumotion forums. A couple of other members and I have tried to replicate the problem for ourselves, unsuccessfully (everything shows just fine for us), and the usual clear cache or wait longer for images to load go-tos did not help the user experiencing the problem. I hope someone can shed light on this issue and provide a solution. Here is the information I can provide:
Forum: http://onesixthfigures.forumotion.com/f1-general-talk
User system: Windows 10
User browser: Chrome, MS Edge, MS Internet Explorer
Issue: some photos not displaying (see more details below)
As an example of the issue, the user can view https://i.servimg.com/u/f62/19/88/56/50/mib3k-12.jpg
but cannot view https://i.servimg.com/u/f62/17/97/35/97/34700710.jpg
NOTE: something auto-changes the url, deleting a "62" after the initial "i" of i.servimg.com -- see update below.
When I ran these examples by him in preparation for posting the question on this forum, he added:
"My browser thinks the second photo has a resolution of 1 x 1 and shows me a black image. The first photo is 800 x 2000 and displays fine."
Thank you in advance for your time and help.
Update: an additional clue
I just noticed that the image links provided as examples above have changed the url from the original url in the process of posting the question here (and they seem to change as soon as you hit "preview"). The original url starts with:
https:// i62. servimg.com/ u/ f62/ (had to type it this way to prevent it from changing again -- the 62 after the i disappears)
When I click on the original links, both images open for me; when I click on the changed links above, the second one does not open, showing a blank (dark) window with a tiny white dot in the middle (apparently the 1 x 1 resolution reported by the user).
Last edited by GubernatorFan on June 10th 2018, 5:08 am; edited 3 times in total (Reason for editing : Additional, potentially useful info)