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Better Portable Graphics (BPG) is a file format for coding digital images, which was created by programmer Fabrice Bellard in 2014. He has proposed it as a replacement for the JPEG image format as the more compression-efficient alternative in terms of image quality or file size. [1]
Zstd at its maximum compression level gives a compression ratio close to lzma, lzham, and ppmx, and performs better [vague] than lza or bzip2. [improper synthesis?] [9] [10] Zstandard reaches the current Pareto frontier, as it decompresses faster than any other currently available algorithm with similar or better compression ratio. [as of?] [11 ...
Guetzli optimizes the quantization step of encoding to achieve compression efficiency. It constructs custom quantization tables for each file, decides on color subsampling, [4] and quantizes adjacent DCT coefficients to zero, balancing benefits in the run-length encoding of coefficients and preservation of perceived image fidelity.
Brotli's new file format allows its authors to improve upon Deflate by several algorithmic and format-level improvements: the use of context models for literals and copy distances, describing copy distances through past distances, use of move-to-front queue in entropy code selection, joint-entropy coding of literal and copy lengths, the use of graph algorithms in block splitting, and a larger ...
The DCT-II is an important image compression technique. It is used in image compression standards such as JPEG, and video compression standards such as H.26x, MJPEG, MPEG, DV, Theora and Daala. There, the two-dimensional DCT-II of blocks are computed and the results are quantized and entropy coded.
The Quite OK Image Format (QOI) is a specification for lossless image compression of 24-bit (8 bits per color RGB) or 32-bit (8 bits per color with 8-bit alpha channel RGBA) color raster (bitmapped) images, invented by Dominic Szablewski and first announced on 24 November 2021.
Zopfli is a data compression library that performs Deflate, gzip and zlib data encoding. [2] It achieves higher compression ratios than mainstream Deflate and zlib implementations at the cost of being slower. [3] Google first released Zopfli in February 2013 under the terms of Apache License 2.0. [4]
This category includes articles, which includes information on image compression methods and algorithms. For information on graphics file formats see Category:Graphics file formats . Subcategories