- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
Did you ever hear the tragedy of WebP The Efficient? I thought not. It’s not a story the GIF gang would tell you. It’s an image legend.
WebP was a new format of pictures, so efficient and so lightweight, it could use modern compression to influence the web pages to actually load faster…
It had such a knowledge of the user’s needs that it could even keep transparency and animations from dying.
The power of modern computing is a pathway to many abilities some consider to be unnatural.
It became so widespread… The only thing we had to be afraid of, was people insisting on using formats from the 90’s, which eventually, of course, they did.
Unfortunately, we didn’t teach the noobs everything we knew about compression, then the noobs killed the format by converting it to PNG and sharing that.
Ironic. We could save the web from being too slow, but not from the users.
Nothing to do with users. Operating systems don’t support it in their default file managers and viewers.
I can view webp easily on both windows and Linux, but I don’t use the default windows photo viewer because it started sucking a few years ago. I don’t even know what I use
Irfanview perhaps?
Nah it’s something with a nicer interface that’s windows only I think, i-view maybe
Irfanview for life.
Imageglass
What operating systems?
Will the real MrPoopyButthole please stand up?
@[email protected] @[email protected] ouuuuweee
I’ve read this a few times over the last few days, but at least the windows image viewer does I believe?
Most do. But i wouldn’t be surprised if Windows Photo Viewer didn’t. In this case, please install a sane third party alternative, like with most Windows tools.
Btw, isn’t webp opened in the browser by default?
In Chrome it does.