QRix
Compress, convert, resize, and enhance images with tools that respect your privacy.
No. Image tools process your pictures locally in your browser, so your photos are never uploaded or stored on a server. This is true whether you're compressing, resizing, or converting. Your images stay entirely on your device.
Most tools support common formats like JPG, PNG, and WebP, and many also handle GIF and SVG depending on the task. Each tool page lists the exact input and output formats it accepts. If you need a specific conversion, search for it by name.
Open the image compressor, add your photo, and adjust the quality setting to balance file size against sharpness. The preview shows the result before you commit, so you can find the right trade-off. When it looks good, download the optimized file.
Many AI-style image tasks run directly in your browser using on-device processing. Some advanced AI features may connect to an external processing service, and where that's the case the tool page will tell you clearly before you proceed. When a tool runs fully on-device, your image never leaves your machine.
There's no fixed server limit because processing is local, but very large or high-resolution images use more memory and take longer. On older phones or low-RAM computers, extremely large files may be slow or fail. Resizing down first, or using a desktop browser, usually resolves this.
Open the resize tool, load your image, and enter the target width and height in pixels or a percentage. You can usually lock the aspect ratio to avoid stretching. Preview the result and download it when the dimensions are right.
After processing, a download button appears with the result, and clicking it saves the file to your device's downloads folder. On mobile you may be prompted to save it to your photos or files. The output has no watermark and is ready to use immediately.
Images you compress, resize, or convert remain your own, so you can use them for any purpose you have the rights to. QRix adds no watermark and claims no ownership over your output. Just make sure you have the rights to the original image you started with.