May 12May 12 I just updated to the new version 6.12.0 (2413) of Enpass on Windows 11. I like the new design, but unfortunately all of my custom icons are now very pixelated.I have a total of 450 entries and for all of them I created and saved custom icons myself (mostly based on the icons of the respective apps from the iOS App Store) so that everything looks clean and high-resolution (especially for websites whose favicons do not look good). I always used a resolution of 256x256 pixels (PNG files) to ensure the icons were high-resolution enough to also look good on high DPI displays such as my iPhone.Until updating Enpass to version 6.12.0 on Windows, everything looked perfect and nothing was pixelated. With the new update, all of my custom icons are now very pixelated, which makes me suspect that a different scaling technique is now being used to scale the icons down (with my screen resolution of 1920x1080 pixels and normal 100% scaling in Windows, the icons are displayed at 40x40 pixels each). Unfortunately, this makes some of the text on the icons hard to read and overall does not look good anymore.Here are some examples:I hope this can be fixed soon. Edited May 12May 12 by SVM
May 13May 13 Every custom icon manually uploaded by the user is resized to 200×200 pixels (you can confirm this by navigating to %appdata%\Sinew Software Systems Pvt Ltd\Enpass\temp while Enpass is unlocked). Because of this, I believe this is simply a display issue introduced by the new version; icons that are already saved, as well as future ones, will continue to be stored the same way.Tip for other users: I recommend using images at 200×200 pixels or slightly above, as Enpass always resizes to that value. Images smaller than 200×200 will not only result in a final file with a larger size on disk after conversion, but will also have lower visual quality. On the other hand, there is no need to use very large files, such as 500×500, since they will also be converted to 200×200 and the visual result is identical to that of an image already at that resolution. Using a 200×200 image directly always results in a smaller file; in the long run, this helps keep your password vault more compact.
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