I’m not sure what you mean. I’ll assume you want a short article about hosting and sharing high-quality images over Tor with an image host and using TXT (text) instructions—if that’s wrong, say so.
| Host | Upload speed (Tor avg) | Quality preservation | Best for | |------|------------------------|----------------------|----------| | Lensdump | 30 KB/s | 10/10 | Small batches (< 10 images) | | Pixhost | 50 KB/s | 8/10 (rare recompress) | Medium batches | | Catbox | 80 KB/s | 10/10 (stores original) | Single large file or zip | i girlx aliusswan image host need tor txt high quality
exiftool).If you're looking to develop a feature similar to what "girlx aliusswan" might offer (based on your query), here are some considerations: I’m not sure what you mean
Before choosing a host, define “high quality”: Step 4: Anonymous Uploading Best Practices
Most mainstream hosts (Imgur, Flickr, PostImage) compress images aggressively. For true high quality, you need specialized hosts.
from PIL import Image, ImageDraw, ImageFont
def add_text_to_image(image_path, text):
try:
# Open the image
img = Image.open(image_path)
# Set font and draw
fnt = ImageFont.load_default()
d = ImageDraw.Draw(img)
# Add text
d.text((10, 10), text, font=fnt, fill=(255, 0, 0))
# Save the image
img.save('output.jpg')
print("Text added successfully.")
except Exception as e:
print(f"An error occurred: e")
# Example usage
add_text_to_image('input.jpg', 'High Quality Image')
You specified a need for a "txt" file. In the context of file sharing and image archiving, .txt files serve a very specific purpose:
.txt file allows an uploader like aliusswan to list dozens or hundreds of links to different image hosts or folders. This is essential for organizing "high quality" collections where files might be split across different hosts.