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WebP
Google's versatile format that does it all—transparency, animation, and superior compression.
WebP is a modern image format developed by Google specifically to speed up the web. It is a 'swiss army knife' format that combines the best features of JPEG (lossy compression), PNG (lossless compression and transparency), and GIF (animation) into a single, efficient package. WebP lossless images are typically 26% smaller than PNGs, while WebP lossy images are 25-34% smaller than comparable JPEGs. This significant size reduction helps websites load faster and consume less bandwidth, which is why it is strongly recommended by Google's PageSpeed Insights. After years of partial browser support, WebP is now universally supported across all modern browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge), making it the default choice for delivering optimized images on the web today.
WebP is based on the VP8 video codec (part of the WebM project). **Lossy WebP** uses predictive coding to encode an image, similar to how video keyframes are compressed. It predicts the values of pixels based on their neighbors and only encodes the difference (residual). It operates in the YUV color space. **Lossless WebP** uses advanced techniques like dedicated entropy codes for different color channels, 2D locality of backward reference distances, and a color cache of recently used colors. It operates in the RGBA color space. Uniquely, WebP supports 'lossy with transparency'—a feature JPEG lacks. This allows for transparent images that are significantly smaller than PNGs by applying lossy compression to the RGB channels while keeping the alpha channel sharp (or compressed).
Google announced WebP in September 2010 as a new open standard for lossy true-color graphics. It was derived from the VP8 video codec technology Google acquired from On2 Technologies. In 2011, Google extended the format to support lossless compression, transparency (alpha channel), and animation, effectively positioning it as a replacement for JPEG, PNG, and GIF simultaneously. Adoption was initially slow outside of the Chrome ecosystem. Firefox added support in 2019, and the final major holdout, Apple's Safari, added support in September 2020 (iOS 14 / macOS Big Sur). This universal support marked the turning point where WebP became safe to use as a primary format.
PNG (Portable Network Graphics)
The web's standard for lossless images with transparency, designed as a patent-free replacement for GIF.
PNG (Portable Network Graphics) emerged in 1996 as a direct response to the patent issues surrounding the GIF format's LZW compression algorithm. Developed by an informal working group and later standardized by the W3C, PNG was engineered from the ground up to be completely patent-free while offering superior technical capabilities. Unlike JPEG, which sacrifices image data for smaller files, PNG preserves every pixel exactly as captured or created. This lossless nature makes PNG the definitive choice for images where precision matters—screenshots, digital artwork, logos, and any graphic with text or sharp edges. The format's support for full alpha transparency (256 levels of opacity per pixel) revolutionized web design, enabling smooth drop shadows, gradient fades, and complex overlays that were impossible with GIF's binary transparency. Today, PNG is universally supported across all browsers, operating systems, and image editing software. While newer formats like WebP offer better compression, PNG remains the standard for lossless web graphics due to its unmatched compatibility and reliability.
PNG uses DEFLATE compression, the same algorithm powering ZIP files and gzip. This two-stage process first applies filtering to exploit the correlation between adjacent pixels, then compresses the filtered data using LZ77 followed by Huffman coding. The result is lossless compression that typically achieves 10-30% size reduction compared to raw pixel data, with some images compressing significantly more. The format supports multiple color types: grayscale (1-16 bits), indexed color with up to 256 palette entries, truecolor RGB (24 or 48 bits), and each with optional alpha channels. PNG's chunk-based architecture allows for extensibility—the file consists of a signature followed by typed chunks containing image data, metadata, and optional features like gamma correction and color profiles. PNG offers two interlacing modes: no interlacing (smaller file size) or Adam7 interlacing, which progressively renders the image in seven passes. While interlacing increases file size by approximately 10%, it provides a better user experience on slow connections by showing a low-resolution preview almost immediately.
PNG development began in January 1995 when Unisys announced it would enforce patents on GIF's LZW compression. Within weeks, an informal group on comp.graphics formed to create a replacement. Thomas Boutell published the first PNG specification draft in March 1995, and after extensive community input, PNG 1.0 became an official W3C Recommendation on October 1, 1996. The format underwent one major revision: PNG 1.2 in 1999 added the iCCP chunk for ICC color profiles and the sRGB chunk for standard color space indication. PNG became an ISO/IEC standard (15948) in 2003, cementing its position as a core web technology. The related APNG (Animated PNG) extension emerged in 2004 but remains unofficial, though it's now supported by all major browsers.
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