The
Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) image format
was the result of work by the Group, which was founded
in 1986 to devise a way to deliver photographic quality
images to the text terminals used at the time.
JPEG files deliver 24-bit colour images,
which means that for each pixel in a digital image,
24 bits of data are allocated to define the exact colour
(allowing a possible 16 million colour variations).
For large images 24 bits (or 3 bytes) per pixel would
general huge file sizes, so JPEGs compress the data
using the JPEG compression algorithm.
JPEG files are particularly good at
photographic images where there are typically smaller
colour variations between neighboring pixels, unlike
text or lines on a white sheet where contrasts between
neighboring pixels are much greater.
JPEG is generally a 'lossy' compression
standard which means some data is inevitably lost during
compression (and thus clarity). It is commong for file
size to be traded with image quality (smaller files
result in lower quality images but quicker download
and display speeds, larger files result in higher quality
images, but slower download and display speeds).
JPEG
compression ratios can be varied according to the
pariticular requirements of quality vs file size.
JPEG compression works by allowing pixels of similar
colour values to be stored as a single colour block,
reducing storage sizes substantially.
Variable JPEG compression allows you to select the
degree of compression, so you can pick the point
at which the compression begins to affect the viewing
of the image. Compression ratios of 20:1 or even
50:1 (for picture based images) without damaging
quality loss (for display on a monitor) are generally
achievable with JPEGs.
JPEG viewers such as Daeja's ViewONE and ViewONE
Pro decompress and render the image data within
the JPEG files to the browser screen at high speed,
and allow users to perform a range of viewer functions
such as zoom in/out, rotate, flip and annotate.
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< link to ViewONE's image viewer pages
< link to
ViewONE Pro's image viewer pages
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