this post was submitted on 04 Apr 2024
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[–] 0x0 10 points 5 months ago (2 children)
[–] [email protected] 6 points 5 months ago

it's not "killed by google" for now.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 5 months ago

It's under a 3 clause BSD licence, so it (this version at least) will always be open source.

[–] spartanatreyu 3 points 5 months ago

even though it's borrowed some things from the jpeg-xl encoder, it's still not as good as actually using jpeg-xl

[–] onlinepersona 2 points 5 months ago (2 children)

Aren't they the stewards of WebP? Did they stop playing with that now?

Anti Commercial AI thingyCC BY-NC-SA 4.0

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago

They can gawk and brew troubled rum at the same time.

And it's not like working on WebP mean they were likely to try killing off... JPEG.

[–] Kissaki 2 points 5 months ago (1 children)

It's not like they can drop jpg, or work on only one thing.

[–] onlinepersona -1 points 5 months ago

Kill By Google is not a thing

Anti Commercial AI thingyCC BY-NC-SA 4.0

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago

This is the best summary I could come up with:


The Google Open-Source Blog today announced Jpegli, a JPEG coding library for encode/decode that maintains backwards compatibility with JPEG while offering around a 35% compression ratio improvement for high quality JPEG compression.

Jpegli's encode and decode complies with the original JPEG standard, compressed images should be clearer and with fewer artifacts, performance is very fast with the likes of libjpeg-turbo and MozJPEG, and there is support for encoding with 10+ bits per component.

The Google blog post explains of Jpegli: "Jpegli works by using a number of new techniques to reduce noise and improve image quality; mainly adaptive quantization heuristics from the JPEG XL reference implementation, improved quantization matrix selection, calculating intermediate results precisely, and having the possibility to use a more advanced colorspace.

All the new methods have been carefully crafted to use the traditional 8-bit JPEG formalism, so newly compressed images are compatible with existing JPEG viewers such as browsers, image processing software, and others."

Google stats Jpegli can compress high quality images 35% more than traditional JPEG codecs.

The Jpegli code for now at least is living within the libjxl (JPEG-XL library) repository.


The original article contains 203 words, the summary contains 186 words. Saved 8%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

Kickass. I wonder if modern encoding could bring hardware-compatible Video CDs up to early DVD quality.