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JPEG 2000 (JP2) is an image compression standard and coding system. It was developed from 1997 to 2000 by a Joint Photographic Experts Group committee chaired by Touradj Ebrahimi (later the JPEG president), [1] with the intention of superseding their original JPEG standard (created in 1992), which is based on a discrete cosine transform (DCT), with a newly designed, wavelet-based method.
He is also an author of EBCOT, one of the algorithms used in JPEG 2000. [2] The software library is named after Kakadu National Park. It is used by several applications, such as for example Apple Inc. QuickTime. It is also used in Google Earth and the online implementation thereof as well as Internet Archive. [3] [4] [5]
Grok is a computer software library to encode and decode images in the JPEG 2000 format. It is designed for stability, high performance, and low memory usage. Grok is free and open-source software released under the GNU Affero General Public License (AGPL) version 3.
CCSDS 122.0 makes use of a three-level two-dimensional discrete wavelet transform (DWT) using a biorthogonal 9/7 tap filters, followed by a bit-plane encoder. It has some design commonalities with ICER and JPEG 2000 that use similar wavelet coding schemes. The transform (DWT) can be computed using either floating-point or integer arithmetic.
OpenJPEG is an open-source library to encode and decode JPEG 2000 images. As of version 2.1 released in April 2014, it is officially conformant with the JPEG 2000 Part-1 standard. [ 3 ] It was subsequently adopted by ImageMagick instead of JasPer in 6.8.8-2 [ 4 ] and approved as new reference software for this standard in July 2015. [ 5 ]
JPEG_XL, JPEG XL Image Encoding; JXL, JPEG XL File Format; HEIF, High Efficiency Image File Format. Some internal structures required for HEIF were added into the ISO_BMFF specification in a 2018 amendment. (ISO/IEC 14496-12:2015/Amd 2:2018) BMFF HEIC/HEIX Registered Brands. Specific implementations of HEIF encoding are registered by MP4RA and ...
J2K-Codec is a commercial library to decode JPEG 2000 images. Version 2.0 was released on 12 April 2011. [1] J2K-Codec supports decoding of different resolution levels and selective tile decoding. [2] It also supports files, produced by ADV202/ADV212 hardware chips. [3]
The JPEG filename extension is JPG or JPEG. Nearly every digital camera can save images in the JPEG format, which supports eight-bit grayscale images and 24-bit color images (eight bits each for red, green, and blue). JPEG applies lossy compression to images, which can result in a significant reduction of the file size.