You're viewing a single thread.
Why is that PNG file 1.3 MB? Is it huge or just unoptimized? Is someone using it as a fullsize Quark poster or something?
10 0 ReplyPNG is lossless and its compression not well suited for photos. It doesn't even have to be huge to get a photo PNG of that size.
21 0 ReplyIt's not TIFF. This isn't NASA imagery. PNGs do alright on compression for photos.
(at least I hope NASA hasn't captured images of Quark)
4 0 ReplyTIFF is also such a hot mess when it comes to picking the correct subformat because there are so many options for compression available, some of them FOSS, some of them proprietary. Edit: … and most of them quite dated.
2 0 Reply
Can be lossless
2 0 ReplyHow would you make a lossy PNG? Just introduce errors randomly? That makes no sense.
3 0 ReplyBy reading google or the wiki
Process data so DEFLATE works more efficiently
2 0 ReplyAre we still talking about PNG? Nowhere in the PNG standard is a description of changing the actual content of an image to make it compress better with DEFLATE. If you are thinking about the filter stage you should know that in this context an image filter is just creating a different representation of the same image, because it is fully reversible.
3 0 ReplySounds very pedantic. ive already given the only answer im gonna give, if you want to label it something different that's your business.
1 0 Reply
3 0 ReplyNice find. That one tells me 1401x1705 and 0.86 MB.
2 0 Reply