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Those JPEG Files - What are
They?
By: Ziv Haparnas
Digital photos are computer files. They are stored
either on the camera memory or on a computer hard
disk. Like any other computer file digital photos
are saved in well known formats. One of those
standard formats is known as JPEG. Here is some
useful information on JPEG files.
Digital photo files are at their core a collection
of bits and bytes. A file format is a description of
how these bits and bytes are ordered. Using standard
file formats allows one device like a digital camera
to save a file that can be later on processed by
another device for example a personal computer
running a digital photo viewer software. JPEG files
are a format that allows the storage of digital
photos in a compressed format. Such format saves
storage space, allows for faster transmission of
files over the Internet and also for faster
performance when viewing photos.
JPEG stands for Joint Photographic Experts Group.
The original JPEG file format goal was to allow for
the compression and storage of high quality digital
photos. The JPEG file format was successful and was
widely used. It later became an official ISO
standard. JPEG files are also known as JPG file
named after their common three letter file
extension. JPEG files are the de-facto standard for
storing digital photos and are used by virtually all
digital cameras and computer software.
JPEG files store digital photos in a compressed
format. There are two types of compression
algorithm: Lossy and lossless. Lossless compression
means that when opening a compressed file the
extracted data is exactly the same as the original.
Lossless compression is used for example to compress
large documents. Lossy compression on the other hand
means that the extracted data is a bit different
than the original. At first it seems that the loss
of data typical to lossy compression algorithms is a
problem. But for some data like digital photos such
loss can be negligible. The advantage of lossy
compression is much higher compression ratios.
Using lossless algorithms with digital photos is
limited and provides very poor compression ratios.
Lossy algorithms on the other hand provide very high
compression ratio while the quality degradation due
to data loss is minimal and in most cases not
noticeable. JPEG files support both lossy and
lossless compression algorithms but since lossless
compression is inefficient for digital photos it is
hardly used. In most cases JPEG files use lossy
compression to efficiently compress digital photos.
An example can help to understand why high
compression ratios are so important even on the
expense of a slight quality degradation. Digital
photos files are arrays of pixels. Each pixel has a
value that represents its color and intensity and is
usually 3 bytes long. A digital photo taken with an
8 mega pixels digital camera has 8,000,000 pixels
and the corresponding image file size would be
8,000,000*3=24,000,000 or 24Mbytes. 24Mbytes is a
very big file. Big files are hard to manipulate they
take a long time to send by email, they occupy large
storage space and they take longer to load. If JPEG
was used to compress and save the same digital photo
a typical result would be a file size of about
3Mbytes. The quality of the JPEG photo would be
lower than the original but the difference would not
be noticeable to the viewer.
Ziv Haparnas is a technology veteran and writes
about practical technology and science issues. This
article can be reprinted and used as long as the
resource box including the backlink is included. You
can find more information about photo album printing
and photography in general on
http://www.printrates.com - a site dedicated to
photo printing.
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