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FFmpeg Adds Support For Animated JPEG-XL
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Originally posted by cl333r View PostI thought a software patent is valid for 20 years?
Disclaimer: I'm against any software patents ever.
20 years ago was the PS2, Xbox, and Gameboy Advance era. Red Hat became Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Fedora was born. Arch had only existed for a year. BTW, I didn't use Arch back then. Debian and Slackware turned 10. Ubuntu won't exist for another year. macOS was still called OSX and the iMac was discontinued. Windows XP was a few months into SP1 and became the rose-colored glasses edition that everyone remembers so fondly.
Now we're on the PS5, Switch, and Xbox OneAPI and they're working on the next versions of them all. 8 years ago Microsoft released their last ever version of Windows and called it Windows 10. I'm dual booting Windows 11. Apple started and stopped using x86 during that time.
Damn, all that nostalgia just made me feel old. 20 years ago I was 17/18.
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Originally posted by TheLexMachine View PostApple wants to implement it because their corporate friends, particularly Adobe, want it to work with their software offerings. They will not use it for their phones any time soon, as they already have HEIF.
Yes, Safari 17 supports JPEG XL. On macOS Sonoma, macOS Ventura and macOS Monterey, as well as iOS, iPadOS, watchOS, and soon, visionOS. We also added HEIC — especially for web apps that want to let users edit photos directly from the camera.
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Originally posted by schmidtbag View PostAlso gets me to realize:
A lot of webcams use MJPEG - I figure that format isn't particularly optimized for 4K+ cameras, so what do they use? Or, is the lack of optimization why there are so few of such cameras?
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Originally posted by ssokolow View PostAt least with APNG, it's an explicit violation of the PNG spec, which says that the PNG header indicates a file which contains one image and, optionally, alternatively-scaled copies of it. (That's why Mozilla has to maintain their own fork of libpng. Because libpng is the reference implementation and you can't upstream changes to the reference implementation which explicitly violate the spec it's a reference implementation for.)
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Originally posted by avis View Post
Define "support".
Currently Firefox (nightly) kinda supports JPEG-XL except:- No color profiles support
- No progressive decoding support
- No alpha-channel support (that's very important)
- No animation support (though I doubt anyone wants it - you've got video codecs for that)
- No HDR support (that's a deal breaker at least for me)
Apple's support is not complete either but they have a ton of cash to burn, so it's just a matter of their will. Firefox with its slowly dissipating market share doesn't have too much leeway.
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Originally posted by curfew View Post
But but but trolls on this forum said Firefox has full JPEG-XL implementation in place but they just don't want to enable it because reasons!!!1
saschanaz added a comment.Aug 11 2021, 9:29 AM
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Hi @wwwwwwww, sorry for the long delay.
I think we'll prioritize AVIF for now, so right now we are not actively investing in this, given that we have limited resource. It's okay to keep the patches posted, but I don't think merging will happen in the foreseeable future.
I'm very sorry for that, especially with your other recent works. But still, thank you for your contribution.
firefox forks with support off the top of my head if you wanted to try one
waterfox - https://github.com/WaterfoxCo/Waterfox/pull/2938
floorp - https://github.com/Floorp-Projects/Floorp/pull/268
librewolf(doesn't currently enable them but patches are there) - https://gitlab.com/librewolf-communi...ge_requests/53
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Originally posted by skeevy420 View Post
It is, but that's multiple lifetimes for computers and software. Most products, operating systems, whatever will have multiple iterations in a 20 year period.
20 years ago was the PS2, Xbox, and Gameboy Advance era. Red Hat became Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Fedora was born. Arch had only existed for a year. BTW, I didn't use Arch back then. Debian and Slackware turned 10. Ubuntu won't exist for another year. macOS was still called OSX and the iMac was discontinued. Windows XP was a few months into SP1 and became the rose-colored glasses edition that everyone remembers so fondly.
Now we're on the PS5, Switch, and Xbox OneAPI and they're working on the next versions of them all. 8 years ago Microsoft released their last ever version of Windows and called it Windows 10. I'm dual booting Windows 11. Apple started and stopped using x86 during that time.
Originally posted by skeevy420 View PostDamn, all that nostalgia just made me feel old. 20 years ago I was 17/18.
Last edited by cl333r; 10 June 2023, 03:19 AM.
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