JPEG is a compressed file format. That is all of the original
information (each
pixel that made up the photograph or whatever when it was created or
scanned) is
not necessarily present in the saved JPEG file.
JPEG is known as a LOSSY compressed file format. That means that some
of the
original data is discarded (lost) in the interest of making the file
smaller.
Maintaining greater quality means a larger file, smaller file means
less
quality. While a compressed TIFF files best compression ratios can only
reach
2 or 3 to 1, JPEG compression ratios with no appreciable loss of quality
can
approach 20 or 40 to 1. Even higher ratios can be achieved with
JPEG.
Essentially JPEG is a very simple file format that requires a very
complex
method for reading and writing it. JPEG requires a compressor to
create/write
the file and a decompressor to read/view the file.
PostScript Level 2 printers will be able to perform a decompression on
an
embedded JPEG file on-the-fly. Thus making it possible to use very high
resolution JPEG compressed color images in desktop publishing documents
without
the performance penalty associated with using large un-compressed
bitmaps.
PhotoCD PhotoCD is a file format that is created by Kodak expressedly
for arch
iving photographs. The most common media for PhotoCD images is a CD-ROM disk,
however it is possible to have PhotoCD images on any media accessible
by your
computer. It stores files in YCC color space and most retrieval
software can
sample this into one of three bit depths 8, 15, 24 (and technically
provides
developers with the ability to add more in the future).
The PhotoCD file is actually three or four images in one file. Whereas
JPEG,
TIFF, etc., can have virtually any resolution (horizontal and vertical
amount of
pixels), PhotoCD has specific fixed resolutions. There is the original
high
resolution file, a 2x version which is half the resolution of the high
res, a 4x
version which is one fourth the resolution of the high res, and a 16x
version
which is one sixteenth the high resolution version (also known as a
thumbnail).
It is not necessary for all versions to be present in the file.
PhotoCD files are not compressed in any way. Each original pixel is
represented
in the file. This can obviously make the file sizes rather large when
dealing
with the full res files.
Currently there is only one way to create a PhotoCD file, through Kodak
or an
authorized Kodak PhotoCD production company. Kodak requires the
purchase of a
custom series of hardware and software to produce the PhotoCD file.
There are,
however, many ways to read a PhotoCD file, including Photo Shop
plug-ins,
PageMaker import filters, etc.
SO WHICH IS BETTER
JPEG for some things, PhotoCD for others.
JPEG has wider support and is a more well developed specification than
is the
PhotoCD format.
PhotoCD is a proprietary format and Kodak wants to keep it that way at
least for
a while.
JPEG files (even ultra high resolution ones) can take up far less space
than
even the medium resolution PhotoCD files because of the lossy
compression.
PhotoCD files maintain all of the fine detail and tonal quality since
none of
the original scan is sacrificed for space.
JPEG files could require longer to open and save on slower machines
because they
must be decompressed or compressed first before viewing.
SO WHAT DO YOU USE?
We use compressed TIFF files for temporary and short-term storage, but
then we
migrate all our long-term storage image files into a JPEG file with
varying
rates of quality (but never below 70%) depending on the image.
We see PhotoCD as a resonable format for Stock catalogs on CD-ROM but we
dont
see it as a viable format for in-house work until either high capacity
erasable
optical (or better storage) gets cheaper and the license to write
PhotoCD
becomes affordable.
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©1990-2012, BCLLCPhotoCD vs. JPEG
One of the most recent topics that became a subject for much
discussion regards
the image data file format JPEG and the newer Kodak PhotoCD format. So
for any
interested (especially those who requested it), below is a summary of
the
information exchanged...
JPEG(Joint Photographic Experts Group) is a bitmap file format that was
proposed
by this global consortium of vendors/developer/academics/ and others.
It is
designed for storing color pixel data in a variety of different
bit-depths 4,
8, 15, 16, 24, 32 (number of colors, respectively 16, 256, 32768, 65536,
16.7M,
4.3B).