• @mke
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    6 months ago

    Semi-related, I’m still salty about Google’s rejection of JPEG XL. I can’t help but remember this when webp discussion crops up, since Google were the ones who created it.

    Why care about JPEG XL?

    Because it seems very promising. source with details.

    Rejection?

    Google started working on JPEG XL support for chrome, then dropped it despite significant industry support. Apple is also in, by the way.

    Why do that?

    Don’t know, many possible reasons. In fairness, even Mozilla hasn’t decided to fully invest in it, and libjxl hasn’t defined a stable public API yet.

    That said, I don’t believe that’s the kind of issue that’d stop Google if they wanted to push something forward. They’d find a way, funding, helping development, something.

    And unfortunately for all of us, Google Chrome sort of… Immensely influences what the web is and will be. They can’t excuse themselves saying “they’ll work on it, if it gains traction” when them supporting anything is fundamental to it gaining traction in the first place.

    You’d have to believe Google is acting in good faith for the sake of the internet and its users. I don’t think I need to explain why that’s far from guaranteed and in many issues incredibly unlikely.

    Useless mini-rant

    I really need a single page with all this information I can link every time image standards in the web are mentioned. There’s stuff I’m leaving out because writing these comments takes some work, especially on a phone, and I’m kinda tired of doing it.

    I still hold hope for JPEG XL and that Google will cave at some point.

    • Victor
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      306 months ago

      Yes, JPEG XL really is the one that got away. 😭

      Hey Google, 🖕🖕 for killing it, man. Very evil and self-centered choice.

      • Victor
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        126 months ago

        Also I just noticed what the arrow in the image pointed to. Holy crap that would be awful if true.

        • @mke
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          6 months ago

          Yeah, sorry, that part I didn’t fact check myself so I didn’t even want to mention it. Like I said, many possible reasons.

          • Victor
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            16 months ago

            Ah no worries. I found it a little bit difficult to believe that the decision wouldn’t be questioned by the company if it didn’t align with its overall goals. That would be weird.

    • @Aux
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      126 months ago

      Not sure what you mean by “Google killed it”. JPEG XL proposal was only submitted in 2018 and it got standardized in 2022. It has a lot of features which are not available in browsers yet, like HDR support (support for HDR photos in Chrome on Android was only added 8 months ago, Firefox doesn’t support HDR in any shape at all), no browsers support 32 bits per component, there’s no support for thermal data or volume data, etc. You can’t just plug libjxl and call it a day, you have to rework your rendering pipeline to add all these features.

      I’d argue that Google is actually working pretty hard on their pipeline to add missing features. Can’t say the same about Mozilla, who can’t even implement HDR for videos for over a decade now.

      • @[email protected]
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        176 months ago

        They removed JPEG XL support from chrome. It was behind a feature flag previously.

        (At least that’s what I gathered from reading the screenshot.)

        • @Aux
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          -26 months ago

          Yeah, why keep a feature which doesn’t work? Once they add missing stuff to the renderer, they’ll add XL support back. But I guess that will take a few years.

      • Kilgore Trout
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        36 months ago

        Can you provide a source on how Google is working hard on JPEG-XL missing features?

        • @Aux
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          16 months ago

          As I said - photo HDR. Do you even read?

    • @dezmd
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      26 months ago

      Just imagine if there was an actual open consortium not spearheaded by monied commercial interests that could temper recent Google decisions. They’ve lost a lot, if not all, of their goodwill with old guard, open web standards nerds. And the old guard that still actively support their standards influencing schemes now make too much money to stop.