If someone really wants a RAW image of my crusty ass dog, for some reason, you can ask me to send it over something else. It’s a waste of bandwidth for the majority of photos, which are view once per person, and never again. Nobody can host that much data for free without some big catch.
Dog.
Can you send it over? I want to count your dog’s hairs.
I’ll send the whole dog if you want to do that
Yeah actually, it looks super cute and cuddly.
He’s probably too friendly for his own good, but yes, he’s the world’s chillest dog.
His breath is worse than a malboro’s.
Lossy compression is antiquated. Jpg should no longer be used as it’s not 1999. I will die on this mole hill.
Lossless compression doesn’t really do well for pictures of real life. For screenshots it’s ideal, but for complex images PNGs are just wayyyy to big for the virtually non noticeable difference.
A high quality JPG is going to look good. What doesn’t look good is when it gets resized, recompressed, screenshotted, recompressed again 50 times.
I know compression has a lot of upsides, but I’ve genuinely hated it ever since broadband was a thing. Quality over quantity all the way. My websites have always used dynamic resizing, providing the resolution in a parameter, resulting in lightning fast load times, and quality when you need it.
The way things are shared on the internet is with screenshots and social media, been like that for at least 15 years. JPG is just slowly deep frying the internet.
Webp, yo!
A high quality jpg looks good. The 100th compression into a jpg looks bad.
PNG is the wrong approach for lossless web images. The correct answer is WebP: https://siipo.la/blog/whats-the-best-lossless-image-format-comparing-png-webp-avif-and-jpeg-xl