Microsoft shows off JPEG rival

If it is up to Microsoft, the omnipresent JPEG image format will be replaced by Windows Media Photo.

The software maker detailed the new image format on Wednesday at the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference in Seattle. Windows Media Photo will be supported in Windows Vista and also be made available for Windows XP, Bill Crow, program manager for Windows Media Photo said in a presentation.

"One of the biggest reasons people upgrade their PCs is digital photos," Crow said, noting that Microsoft has been in contact with printer makers, digital camera companies and other unnamed industry partners while working on Windows Media Photo. Microsoft touts managing "digital memories" as one of the key attributes of XP successor Vista.

In his presentation, Crow showed an image with 24:1 compression that visibly contained more detail in the Windows Media Photo format than the JPEG and JPEG 2000 formats compressed at the same level.

Still, the image in the Microsoft format was somewhat distorted because of the high compression level. Typically digital cameras today use 6:1 compression, Crow said. Windows Media Photo should offer better pictures at double that level, he said. "We can do it in half the size of a JPEG file."

Not only does compression save storage space, which is especially important for devices such as cell phones and digital cameras, a smaller file can also print faster, transfer faster and help conserve battery life on devices, Crow said. "Making a file that is smaller has all kinds of benefits."

The compression technology is also "smart" -- it is possible to process only part of a huge, picture file to show a smaller version, Crow said. Additionally, Microsoft's new image format allows such things as rotating the image without the need to decode it and subsequently encode it again, he said.

The new image format was received with cautious enthusiasm by some of the WinHEC attendees. Ralf Mueller, an application planner at mobile phone maker Sony Ericsson, said he would look into the new format just as his company looked into supporting Windows Media Audio and Windows Media Video.

"Considering our development cycle, I could not see us supporting Windows Media Photo before 2008," Mueller said.

Steven Wells, a part-time professional photographer, said he sees promise in the new file format. "The JPEG artefacts make it almost unusable for professional photographers," he said. "Windows Media Photo is possibly the first viable compression format."

Yet, success will depend on adoption, Wells said. Microsoft will need to get players such as Adobe Systems and Apple Computer on board to win over the graphics professionals, he noted. A major unknown is licensing, which Microsoft has not yet addressed. "Licensing can kill this," Wells said.

Windows Media Photo was developed by the same people who worked on Windows Media Video and Audio, Crow said. The image format takes a new approach to compression as well as colour space and colour conversion, he said. Furthermore, it gives a lot of flexibility, including in the pixel format and bit rate, Crow said.

Microsoft has finished the first official version of the "porting kit" software needed to build support for Windows Media Photo into devices and platforms other than Windows. It should be available soon, Crow said.

Licensing details for the technology are still being ironed out. These could be a concern, Crow acknowledged, but "the philosophy has been that licensing should not be a restriction" to adoption, he said.

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Talkback 4 comments

    Digital photos John Osmond -- 26/05/06 (in reply to #120135063)

    I've sold lots of new systems and upgraded more than I can count over the years but I've never had a request for either that starts off with "I need something better to run my digital photos".

    "I need something to run the latest games / surf the net quicker / speed up my business app and maybe it would be cool if I could connect a digital camera to it as well" but "I need to upgrade because of my digital photo's" ... I don't think so :)

    Haven't they heard of PNG Anonymous -- 26/05/06

    Lets re-invent the wheel instead

    Well, NO probably Anonymous -- 29/05/06 (in reply to #120135069)

    Digital photos are now mainstream. A LOT of people don't know if their phone stores JPEGS, BMPs or GIFs. They just know they want to store MORE and have them LOOK BETTER when they print them on A3 paper.

    The fact they were taken with a crap lense is beyond them.

    I Dont Mind Anonymous -- 31/05/06

    So as long as they dont make people use it as THE ONLY option.. or not allow windows users to view images in this format.. then ok. if it is indeed better when compressed then thats good coz the net would go faster if it were encoded into smaller files. although it usually is easier to increase speeds such as add another SD card, better broadband connection, more hdd yada yada yada than it is to coerce people to use this format as THE ONLY standard. JPEG still lives and so does TXT.
    with digital cameras... get one that can fit in a 1gb memory stick then you big fags! as for my digital SLR though, i encode them in PNG not JPEG. if it gets full, take out the SD card, replace it, go home plug it into the comp. if you have a laptop, so much the better.
    simple solution.. better results.

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