PNG

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Revision as of 23:34, 20 October 2007 by 192.115.104.88 (talk)
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releltalelt PNG is international image standard. It's a lossless image format good for artworks and small scans (where DJVU and JBIG are not suitable).

Since it's a lossless format files must be big and we should avoid them and use JPEG if possible, right? Not so. If you save a full-sized photo or raw scan in PNG format - you'll get a huge file, that's true. But if you use some simple lossy techniques first (conversion to 4 or 16 levels of grayscale or just draw 16-color image with palette from the start) then you can reduce the size of a file many times without apparent quality loss and without quality degradation after save/resave. JPEG is notorious for quality degradation over time: each open-edit-save cycle adds distortion - no matter what quality settings you are using (there are no lossless JPEGs unless it's JPEG 2000) - but with paletted PNG you are losing quality on first save (where you ignore small variations in lighting) while further editing is lossless.

Use PNG for small artworks (where SVG's vector nature can not produce savings), small scans (for books it's better to use DJVU or JBIG), etc. Don't forget about OptiPNG - while not a panacea it often can reduce size of PNG file by 10-15% for free (without any quality loss).

And finally: don't use the "Save" option in Photoshop - use "Save for the Web" instead: it's possible to store comments in PNG and Photoshop is abusing this possibility to store a lot of proprietary settings in PNG files - doubling and tripling the size of small PNG files! And since OLPC will not include Photoshop these settings will just uselessly fill up storage space.

There is a page on choosing image formats that will help you to understand the differences and how to know which format will be best for the intended use.

More info can be found on Wikipedia.