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Now Google thinks it's found a better way to compress JPEG. In research published Thursday, it details technology called Guetzli that cuts JPEG file sizes by 35 percent in its testing.
Google has announced a new and improved JPEG implementation that it claims can shrink file sizes by as much as 35% with better image quality than you'd see in an equivalent standard JPEG file.
Google has improved the quality of WebP, an image format it promises will speed up the Web --if the company can just convince people to use it instead of JPEG. WebP, unveiled last year, is a still ...
Google has developed and open-sourced a new JPEG algorithm that reduces file size by about 35 percent—or alternatively, image quality can be significantly improved while keeping file size constant.
Google's research team created a new JPEG encoder that will keep everyone happy. It serves up images that look great, but their file size is 35 percent smaller.
Google's open-source Jpegli promises 35% better image compression than other methods, improving quality while saving bandwidth. The coding library is compatible with existing JPEG encoders, making ...
The new encoder is called Guetzli — Swiss German for “cookie,” apparently — and according to Google, it can create “high quality JPEG images with file sizes 35 percent smaller than ...
Google hopes its new Guetzli JPEG encoder will speed up image-heavy websites and cut bandwidth costs for mobile users. Written by Liam Tung, Contributing Writer March 20, 2017, 6:11 a.m. PT ...
Google recently introduced Jpegli, a new, advanced coding library to encode and decode JPEG images with significant improvements over traditional libraries. Jpegli is backward-compatible with ...
For obvious reasons, Google has a vested interest in reducing the time it takes to load websites and services. One method is reducing the file size of images on the internet, which they previously ...
Google has introduced Jpegli, a JPEG library for image encoding. The new library is intended to be faster, more visually pleasing, and more efficient than traditional JPEGs.
Google is promoting a new image format, aimed at overthrowing the venerable JPEG, GIF, and PNG. Naturally, WebP is faster, and it’s open source. In IT Blogwatch, bloggers squint at their pixels.