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(The format is named after the Joint Photographic Experts Group, which devised it.)
JPEG - Joint Photographic Experts Group, a common method of compression in photographic images.
The term "JPEG" is an acronym for the Joint Photographic Experts Group, which created the standard.
The current standard, known as JPEG, for Joint Photographic Experts Group, emerged in the late 1980's and is based primarily on 1970's technology.
Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG)
JPEG (which stands for Joint Photographic Experts Group, the standards body that created it) is a 24-bit, platform-independent image and graphics format.
The first, called the JPEG or Joint Photographic Experts Group standard, was adopted by the International Standards Organization early this year.
Over the years, the JPEG format (the term is short for Joint Photographic Experts Group, and the format is also identified by the file extension .
The scope of the organization includes the work of both the Joint Photographic Experts Group and Joint Bi-level Image Experts Group.
It is a good idea to send attached photographs in the Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) format rather than the GIF or TIFF formats.
UI core-managing rendering of bitmap images (including compressed raster images like Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG)), vector graphics, text and animations.
Lossless JPEG refers to a 1993 addition to JPEG standard by the Joint Photographic Experts Group to enable lossless compression.
The name "JPEG" stands for Joint Photographic Experts Group, the name of the committee that created the JPEG standard and also other still picture coding standards.
The Joint Photographic Experts Group, or JPEG, solution can compress photographs to one-hundredth of their original size, although the images often lose resolution in the process because some information about the image is lost.
A. The JPEG format (short for Joint Photographic Experts Group) is a common type of image file and is used extensively for Web pages and pictures taken by digital cameras.
JPEG-LS is a "near-lossless" image format by the Joint Photographic Experts Group, though far less widely known and supported than the other lossy JPEG format discussed above.
David is a Board Member of The Joint Photographic Experts Group (Jpeg), The Moving Picture Experts Group, and is an advisor to the Sacramento Film Commission.
Look under "Quad Level" for modern maps and aerial photos; the files designated J.P.E.G., for Joint Photographic Experts Group, can be downloaded and then viewed with a Web browser.
Forgent asserts that its patent covers parts of the technology that is used in the JPEG digital still-image compression standard that was defined by the Joint Photographic Experts Group in 1990.
Because of its modular design, it permits the addition of a variety of hardware-based image compression technologies, including industry standards developed by the Joint Photographic Experts Group and the Motion Picture Experts Group.
In July 2007, the Joint Photographic Experts Group and Microsoft announced HD Photo to be under consideration to become a JPEG standard known as JPEG XR.
According to Computer Reseller News it will incorporate parts of both the Motion Picture and the Joint Photographic Experts Groups algorithms, rendering it capable of running video at 30 frames a second without additional hardware.
It was created by the Joint Photographic Experts Group committee in 2000 with the intention of superseding their original discrete cosine transform-based JPEG standard (created in 1992) with a newly designed, wavelet-based method.
It includes two sub-groups: the Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG SG) and the Joint Bi-level Image experts Group (JBIG SG).
JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) is a compression method; JPEG-compressed images are usually stored in the JFIF (JPEG File Interchange Format) file format.