PNG Second Edition Is a W3C Proposed Recommendation 66
Quadraphonic writes "I'm surprised I haven't seen this yet: PNG Second Edition is a W3C Proposed Recommendation. Thoughts?"
"Hello again, Peabody here..." -- Mister Peabody
Great! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Great! (Score:4, Interesting)
I agree with you, I'll be looking forward to seeing PNGs used in mainstream sites (such as Slashdot) in 2006, if not later.
Good ideas without corporative support will always remain just that, good ideas.
Re:Great! (Score:1)
So, what's the problem? Why cater the status quo? If MSIE sucks, tell people that that's the case!
Re:Great! (Score:3)
Re:Great! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Great! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Great! (Score:5, Informative)
So, enhancements to the underlying OS are necessary for the features that most other modern browsers have, such as transparent PNGs, popup blocking, and tabbed browsing? Obviously, they have no intention of ever adding these features to IE. This is awful. It's staggering that AOL just snubbed the most innovative browser on the planet to make a deal to use a stagnant, obsolete 1998 browser until 2010 (Re: this story [slashdot.org]).
Re:Great! (Score:2)
The agreement gives AOL the right to use it, it doesn't require them to... and it doesn't require MS to make it possible to do so, with IE6sp1 as the last standalone browser and from here on in the browser being completely integrated into the OS it is highly unlikely that MS will be willing to seperate it, they will without a doubt say it's in
Re:Great! (Score:1, Interesting)
If you turn on your noodle and read between the lines, what he's saying is that olde
Re:Great! (Score:2)
Re:Great! more unproven links and puffery (Score:2)
you are the lamest of trolls.
Re:Great! more unproven links and puffery (Score:2)
Takes one to know one, I guess....
Re:Great! (Score:3, Informative)
And second - what is the CSS hack? That would be handy for people to do as an interm fix. (And real world html is all about interm hack fixes to get things to look right).
--
Evan
Re:Great! (Score:5, Informative)
Mind you, IE-Mac has a whole *host* of problems all of it's own...
Re:Great! (Score:1)
PNG version 2?? (Score:3, Interesting)
Honestly, who the hell is using version 1? Most pages still serve JPEG and (God help us) GIF files for images. Was there a feature missing from PNGv1 that was slowing adoption?
As much as I agree with the idea of standards, the fact is, if no one bothers to follow them, or implement them, what's the point?
Re:PNG version 2?? (Score:5, Interesting)
Single bit transparency (GIFs) suck compared to pages with alpha channel transparencies but since MSIE can't render them correctly they fail to make the market.
Oh, there's another problem - lack of a good program to save PNGs. AFAIK, Gimp is the best PNG generator around all the Windows photo editing software I used to use (Photoshop and Paint Shop Pro) generated terribly large PNGs, I used to save them as GIFs.
The best PNG compressor for Windows (Score:5, Informative)
Re:PNG version 2?? (Score:2)
And this is the fault of PNG how? If IE choses not to follow a standard (surprise, surprise), does it require writing a new standard? Do people really think that MS will suddenly support alpha transparency in PNGv2?
This sounds like a great way to encourage people to move away from MSIE. Show them nicely renderd alpha transparent PNG files in Mozilla, and comparable files in MSIE and let them see that IE is in fact, crippled.
Re:PNG version 2?? (Score:1)
Re:PNG version 2?? (Score:5, Informative)
What's that mean? My site uses both photoshop and imagemagick to generate PNGs and they come out the same as gimp. An algorithm is an algorithm. I think that maybe gimp might default to PNG8 while photoshop defaults to PNG24. Either way its customizable. Photoshop has full PNG compatibility.
Re:PNG version 2?? (Score:2)
Re:PNG version 2?? (Score:2)
Gimp, like almost every other GNU program I've ever needed to run, runs fine on Windows. So, what's the problem?
I work completely in a Windows environment and we use PNGs a lot to compress screen shots. They come out way smaller than JPGs and maintain all of the colors unlike GIFs. We capture them with SnagIt, a windows program, and we use them in MS Word. I wouldn't say they have no support, they work way better in MS Word than the alternatives, just that the vast majority of users in the world don't
Re:PNG version 2?? (Score:5, Informative)
The proplem is the non-existant Alpha support on MSIE. Every other [modern] browser reads the alpha beautifully.
For creating PNGs, outside of using GD in PHP, I use Fireworks [macromedia.com] which so far does the trick as long as you use the Export Preview function, not the native 'save as..' function. WAY better than GIFs by far!
Personally, you have to individual check on each image that comes into your browser to know who's using what. PNG is used more than you think. But I still wish MSIE would wise up to the alpha problem.
Re:PNG version 2?? (Score:2)
Please see my other post in response to essentially the same question.
P.S. 2 minute posting time limit sucks!! How about incremental increases, 30 seconds, 1 minute, 2 minutes. That way, if you only post a couple of comments, no problem. If you're a troll, you have to wait more and more to crapflood?
"Second edition" is a minor spec update (Score:5, Informative)
When the W3C release a "second edition" recommendation, it's mostly editorial changes - see the changes summary in the PNG recommendation (or see XML 1.0 second edition, which is the current XML spec, for an example of another "second edition").
The linked spec is basically compatible with the original version, but some of the conditions for conformance have been tightened up (not that that matters for IE purposes since it didn't conform anyway) and the necessary verbiage to use the text as an ISO standard has been added (W3C policy is to release "recommendations" which are treated like standards, but this one is actually going to be a standard in theory as well as in practice).
Now if we ... (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Web masters are more of a designer than a tech, they don't follow all the newest developments (most here still use HTML 1.0).
2) Netscape 4.x doesn't load them, and administration feels that it is important to support the people that refuse to upgrade.
Again, thats here
Altp.
Re:Now if we ... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Now if we ... (Score:2)
Re:Now if we ... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Now if we ... (Score:1)
Re:Now if we ... (Score:2)
Here are some examples of the HTTP Accept header...
IE:
image/gif, image/x-xbitmap, image/jpeg, image/pjpeg, application/vnd.ms-excel, application/vnd.ms-powerpoint, application/msword, application/x-shockwave-flash, */*
Mozilla:
text/xml,application/xml,application/xhtml+xml,te x t/html;q=0.9,text/plain;q=0.8,video/x-mng,image/pn g,image/jpeg,image/gif;q=0.2,*/*;q=0.1
Opera:
text/html, image/png, image/jpeg, image/gif, im
Re:Now if we ... (Score:3, Funny)
I say support them with a hammer-blow to the back of the head.
In front of their children (as a lesson).
Dancing on their grave afterwards is optional (see spec).
Re:Now if we ... (Score:2)
For things that DO have large, contiguous areas of the same color (like website graphics, or the mostly black "picture of Earth from Mars" photo), PNG is usually better (file size-wise), especially if those graphics can be reduced to 8-bit indexed color.
Re:Now if we ... (Score:2)
Re:I have a thought... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I have a thought... (Score:2)
Re:I have a thought... (Score:1)
What's the point? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not saying that we have to slow down the technological progress because IE can't support standards, but come one, if the major player isn't supporting even the older version of the standard (PNG v.1 is a part of the W3C standards, right?) then how could we expect anyone to support yet another version?
Re:What's the point? (Score:3, Informative)
First, unlike GIF it supports more than 256 colors
Second, just like GIF it's lossless (It could be said that conversion to 256 colors is a loss though)
Third, it's a bit smaller than GIF
JPG can't deal properly with thin lines. Which means that if you want a good encoding of a picture that contains lines and text, like color comics you have to use JPG or GIF. If the comic happens to have many colors then PNG is the only thing that will look g
Making PNG work with Internet explorer (Score:2)
This is what I did with my user image for livejournal [livejournal.com]. Sure, it's not as nice as full 24-bit transparency, but it's everything you were able to get with (non-animated) GIFs, except with smaller files. (And, unlike most GIF usage, legal without buying a license)
Doing this to an image inside GIMP is pretty simple: Image->Mode->Indexed.
T
PNG support in MSIE 5.5 (Score:5, Informative)
Now, be prepared: it will work _only_ with tags, so no alpha for background images yet. Still, it's an improvement.
I still don't get why they didn't implement it properly in the first place, let's not talk about it, it's a 1996 recommendation and I'm already so mad and frustrated by their bogus workarounds covering their flaws (XML parser bugs, ignores the IGNORE directive in DTDs, anyone?)
Anyway, the trick is to use a CSS on all images:
img { behaviour: url('/path/to/.htc'); }
using the
Thanks [eae.net]
You just have to point to a 1x1 spacer GIF in the
Works pretty fine, is compatible with Opera/Mozilla/IE and _at last_ you can get rid of 1988-oriented GIFs.
Should you want to support IE 5.5, welcome to the future of the web of yesterday
Recompression (Score:3, Informative)
Update from spec 1.0 to 1.2 (Score:4, Informative)
Bleh. Anyway. It's not about PNG 2.0 or anything. If you want animation, you still have to use MNG [libpng.org].
Re:Update from spec 1.0 to 1.2 (Score:2)
I want to get the hell away from GIFs, because I don't want to have to get a license to use it (not like it really matters), and plus being limited to 256 colors sucks.
At last! (Score:2, Funny)
Put your browser through the PNG transparency test (Score:2)