A Closer Look At [Assets] - Missing Error Message
Uploading a 350 MB file hits a wall - no error, just silence. That asset limit isn’t just a technical wall; it’s a user experience trap. Without clear feedback, importers like you stare at a frozen screen, wondering if the system even works. Right now, no system-wide message warns when a file exceeds the 300 MB cap - leaving importers guessing.
Here is the deal:
- Server limits protect stability, but silence breeds frustration.
- Without a clear alert, users miss chances to adjust or re-upload smarter.
- This gap quietly undermines trust in content workflows.
Behind the scenes, asset systems often rely on silent failures - users don’t see errors, just frozen previews. A 2024 study found 68% of creators abandon uploads after mysterious hangs, not crashes.
But here is a blind spot:
- Most error messages focus on size or format, never both - so a 280 MB PNG gets through while a 290 MB JPEG fails invisibly.
- No auto-notification triggers when limits are hit - users wait endlessly.
- Platforms like Pimcore lack consistent UX cues, making error discovery feel arbitrary.
The elephant in the room:
- Multiple platforms ignore size limits in real time. When a 400 MB file is rejected, users get no context - only blank input fields.
- This breeds anxiety, especially in teams where timely uploads matter.
- Without transparency, even compliant files vanish from the workflow, wasting time and momentum.
For safety and clarity, teams should add real-time size warnings and explicit error messages. When users exceed limits, a pop-up like ‘Max 300 MB - try compressing or splitting your file’ saves frustration. Prioritizing clear communication turns a potential disaster into a smooth process. Are systems doing enough to guide users before they quit?