David Barkin
Senior Member
Hi MarcV
I've never used JP2000 but I'm sure it's everything you say it is. However there are two points to take into consideration.
1. It's proprietory so that at least for now if you yourself saved an image and tried to give it to me, I couln't read it.
2. The latest release of Photoshop has a standard JPEG option which is lossless. It compresses files to about 25 percent of original, so still a very convenient storage format.
So J2000 will catch on only if it's more freely available.
I might speak differently if I was into video, where it probably has more uses but for photography it doesn;t make sense at the moment. Perhaps things will change...
Dave
I've never used JP2000 but I'm sure it's everything you say it is. However there are two points to take into consideration.
1. It's proprietory so that at least for now if you yourself saved an image and tried to give it to me, I couln't read it.
2. The latest release of Photoshop has a standard JPEG option which is lossless. It compresses files to about 25 percent of original, so still a very convenient storage format.
So J2000 will catch on only if it's more freely available.
I might speak differently if I was into video, where it probably has more uses but for photography it doesn;t make sense at the moment. Perhaps things will change...
Dave
A great free tool that lets you see the difference between ordinary
JPEG and JPEG2000 can be downloaded here:
http://www.aware.com/products/compression/j2k_download.html