• Semperverus
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    55 days ago

    I personally enjoy PNG image format for my compressed web images, but I’ll be damned if JPG isn’t “good enough” while also being magnitudes smaller, especially when I have to start embedding things as base64 encoded text in outlook and teams at work, or when I don’t want my screenshots folder at home taking 2TB of disk space (Spectacle can change image format).

    • @[email protected]
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      25 days ago

      PNG is really designed for images that are either flat color or use an ordered dither. I mean, we do use it for photographs because it’s everywhere and lossless, but it was never really intended to compress photographs well.

      There are formats that do aim for that, like lossless JPEG and one of the WebP variants.

      TIFF also has some utility in that it’s got some sort of hierarchical variant that’s useful for efficiently dealing with extremely-large images, where software that deals with most other formats really falls over.

      But none of those are as universally-available.

      Also, I suppose that if you have a PNG image, you know that – well, absent something like color reduction – it was losslessly-compressed, whereas all of the above have lossless and lossy variants.

    • @daggermoon
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      25 days ago

      JPG is absolutly fine for web based images. I was thinking more of jpeg-xl. Smaller files size and identical quality to jpeg. Also it supports lossless too. WebP is also good but I don’t like that it’s developed by Google.

      • @[email protected]
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        15 days ago

        Probably the biggest blunder I ever made in terms of digital storage was to convert a lot of my images to lossy WebP. Even with a “high quality” setting, it’s noticeably worse then JPEG-XL or even AVIF.