Don't Bog Down Your XSitePro Website With The
Wrong Image Types
Your XSitePro Website and Image Formats: GIF, JPEG,
PNG and More.
When you want to put graphics on your XSitePro website,
you'll face an unexpected problem: what format should they be
in? On their own computers, many people save pictures in
Windows' default BMP (bitmap) format, but the files it creates
are simply much too large to put on a website – they'd take
about a minute for visitors to download and use up all your
bandwidth in the process.
When you put pictures on the web, you need to consider the
trade-off you want between image quality and speed: the smaller
the file, the worse it's going to look. To help you out, here's
a comparison.
GIF.
GIF stands for Graphics Interchange Format, and was the
first image format used on the web. It was invented by
CompuServe in 1987, updated in 1989, and hasn't changed since –
and it shows. Images stored in GIF format can only use a
maximum of 256 colors, which makes things like photographs and
logos look terrible. GIFs popularity is mainly due to it
being first and producing very small files, although it is also
notable for being the only image format that allows you to
create small animations.
Really, the only things you should use GIFs for now are
files that have a limited number of colors, and are technical
in nature – diagrams, for example, work well in GIF format.
Things like photographs that use many colors will come out
looking very strange.
JPEG.
JPEG was designed by the Joint Photographic Experts Group,
who gave it its name. It was designed as a format
suitable for storing high-quality photographs at low file sizes
– file sizes small enough to put on the web. Today, the
format is supported in almost all web browsers, and is also the
format that you'll get photos in if you take them with a
digital camera.
The most important feature of JPEG is both the best and
worst thing about it: lossy compression. The word 'lossy'
means that data is lost from the picture when it is saved at
smaller file sizes. Image-editing programs will generally
let you choose how much compression you want, from none
(highest quality, large file size) to 100% (very small files,
but terrible quality). Unfortunately, JPEGs that have
been compressed too much come out looking worse than useless,
but many people still use high compression settings out of a
misguided desire to have the very smallest files
possible. If you've ever seen images on the web that look
very 'blocky', you've been a victim of JPEG compression.
If you do use JPEG, then, it's really recommended that you
turn compression off altogether, or use a maximum of about 25%
– the files are quite small already, without going overboard
with the compression.
PNG.
PNG stands for Portable Network Graphics, and is the newest
web image format in widespread use. It was designed as a
replacement for the outdated GIF format, allowing files to use
millions of colors instead of only 256. PNG files have
smaller file sizes than GIFs, although they are often larger
than JPEGs, since PNG compression is lossless (never loses any
image quality).
The most useful feature of PNG is that it supports something
known as 'alpha transparency': basically, images with
transparent backgrounds that blend in perfectly. The only
thing stopping widespread adoption of this feature is that it
isn't currently supported by Internet Explorer, but there is a
workaround for this problem: search for ‘AlphaImageLoader’ for
more information.
Converting Between Formats.
For most purposes on the web, all the graphics you want to
use should either be in JPEG format (for photos) or PNG format
(for less complicated graphics). That's a problem if
you've got a collection of images in all sorts of other
formats.
Luckily, a good image editor should be able to convert from
any format to any other very easily. In Paint Shop Pro,
for example, you simply open your images and save them again
using whatever format you want – you can even run the 'Batch
Converter', which will convert a whole folder full of files all
at once. If you don't have an image editing program,
there are plenty of free image viewers that will do the same
job for you.
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