- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- didyoueverhear
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- didyoueverhear
Did you ever hear the tragedy of WebP The Efficient? I thought not. It’s not a story the GIF gang would tell you. It’s an image legend.
WebP was a new format of pictures, so efficient and so lightweight, it could use modern compression to influence the web pages to actually load faster…
It had such a knowledge of the user’s needs that it could even keep transparency and animations from dying.
The power of modern computing is a pathway to many abilities some consider to be unnatural.
It became so widespread… The only thing we had to be afraid of, was people insisting on using formats from the 90’s, which eventually, of course, they did.
Unfortunately, we didn’t teach the noobs everything we knew about compression, then the noobs killed the format by converting it to PNG and sharing that.
Ironic. We could save the web from being too slow, but not from the users.
it’s a compressed image format you shouldn’t be converting between them
Conversion is better than useless. I was caught out by it recently. I was sent an image (for a product return). Unfortunately the upload process wouldn’t even see webp files.
Obviously, the best solution is to extend support as widely as possible as quickly as possible. As an interim we also need to be able to use those files, despite the target software not supporting them.
I’m pretty sure you can open a webp in mspaint and save it as a png. If not you definitely can with paint.net
That doesn’t help when your using an android phone at the time. It’s doable, but cumbersome.
Looks like webp worked in android 4… Lossless was added in 10 so maybe that’s what doesn’t always work?
I should be able to convert whatever I want.