JPEG Quality Estimator

An application that indicates the quality of a JPEG file
Download

JPEG Quality Estimator Ranking & Summary

Advertisement

  • Rating:
  • License:
  • Freeware
  • Publisher Name:
  • mediachance
  • Operating Systems:
  • Windows All
  • File Size:
  • 287 KB

JPEG Quality Estimator Tags


JPEG Quality Estimator Description

JPEG Quality Estimator is an easy to use utility that will evaluate the compression quality of your JPEG files We all know that JPG use lose compression, so anything you save is always in exact terms worse than original. It may not look like because of the way it is compressed but it is. And it is logical that if we later load JPG and then save again the degradation goes of course further. Right now I can tell you the most degradation will be probably in the first round - from the original to the first JPG. If we load the JPG and save again this time the data are already somehow processed by first round so the degradation won't be as strong as first time. Of course there is quality loss on the second time and if we load and save it again and again we will soon realize the quality loss is adding up. Loss is adding up but not as many people think - if we use twice 75% first time then 75% second time it doesn't mean that the second round is equal to 55% of original quality (75% of first 75%). There is some loss but far less. So it doesn't work like your taxes. If we consider all this then it start to be obvious that if we ever need re-save a JPG we should use the same quality settings as a first time. Why not bigger? Because by bigger Q second time we won't gain anything at all! The file is already degraded by first round and these data will not be returned by simply setting higher quality next round. Setting the Q second time higher than first time will just make the JPG bigger, but still worse than the first. If you need to load and save a JPEG you should use the same Quality settings as was used on the JPG when it was first created. We of course assume that we work on the same pixels. If you for example load an image of dog completely repaint it into image of sunflower then of course you can also choose any quality setting you like (and also a doctor). But this isn't the case in 99.9% Talking now about digital cameras - our main topic: After we make a change on the image from digital camera we should save it with the same Quality settings as it was produced from the raw data inside the camera.


JPEG Quality Estimator Related Software