I don’t know what a .webp file is but I don’t like it. They’re like a filthy prank version of the image/gif you’re looking for. They make you jump through all these hoops to find the original versions of the files that you can actually do anything with.

Edit: honestly I assumed it had something to do with Google protecting themselves from image piracy shit

  • @tvmole@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    282 years ago

    Why do so few apps (besides browsers) seem to support it? E.g. Win10 photo viewer and seemingly all my messaging apps

    The format itself sounds good, and I see it everywhere online, but is there some reason it’s unsupported?

    • BrikoX
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      2 years ago

      .webp was developed Google so of course Microsoft hates it and tried to hinder it’s adoption.

      • noobg
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        32 years ago

        Paint.net is one of the first apps I install on every new computer. It’s just excellent for quick and dirty image manipulations.

    • esty
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      22 years ago

      Because Google bad, even when they make the rare good thing

    • @stewsters@lemmy.world
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      222 years ago

      Works great in Ubuntu.

      My guess is Microsoft doesn’t like it because Google came up with it. Ms has had some issues with recognizing open formats before. Could be you are using old versions of apps too.

      • @Wyvven@lemmy.world
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        12 years ago

        Oddly enough I had a hard time getting webp files to work as desktop backgrounds on Ubuntu even if it opened it fine in the viewer. Had to use a converter

  • @Azzu@lemm.ee
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    102 years ago

    All programs that I use support them - what are these ancient apps that don’t?

    • Sparky678348OP
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      Well when I try to send one in Discord it prompts the other person to download the file instead of embedding it for them to look at

      Oh yeah, and they don’t even show up to send in Messenger, they just error there.

      • Jamie
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        02 years ago

        That’s discord being shite. Same thing happens with AV1 videos. But if you inspect element inside the client and change the source video or image, webp or AV1 can embed just fine.

        My assumption is that they’re afraid they won’t display on all platforms. But it could still try.

        I can’t speak for Messenger though. I won’t touch Facebook with a pole.

      • Pyro
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        12 years ago

        Weird. WebP works for me in Discord just fine, both on desktop and mobile. It’s all just Chromium under the hood after all (unless it’s an iPhone, in which case it’s probably Safari)

  • @Matriks404@lemmy.world
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    -12 years ago

    It’s just a modern image format. What do you mean you need to make hoops to do anything with it? Unless you are using some old, outdated software you should be able to do everything with it just like with good old .png’s or jpg’s.

    • Obinice
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      332 years ago

      Old, outdated software? Windows 11 won’t open it, nor will Photoshop, last I checked.

      I’m fully aware of the format, but until it’s compatible with everything seamlessly the way PNG or JPEG are, I’d rather stick with those for now.

      What’s especially annoying is web pages that store their images seemingly as JPEG but are actually serving them through a CDN that converts them to WEBP if the browser supports them, so you try to save a seemingly JPEG JPEG, only to find at the last second it’s actually WEBP.

      • Fonzie!
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        12 years ago

        Just like GIFs, only web browsers open it, in Windows. That, and Irfanview.

      • @monobot@lemmy.ml
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        42 years ago

        Yes, because webp images are smaller while having similar quality than jpeg. On some images is greater reduction than on others.

        So websites and CDNs are using webp to speed up delivery and reduce download size.

        But yes, software support is not complete.

      • @player2@lemmy.world
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        22 years ago

        FWIW I use Photoshop 2023 to convert webp images to other formats occasionally. My Mac has no issues viewing them but I think my windows 10 desktop has issues. Pretty much all browsers support it though.

  • @regbin_@lemmy.world
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    282 years ago

    WebP is awesome (JPEG-XL is awesomer though). It compresses better than JPEG which was introduced 30(!) years ago. It’s time for JPEG to go away.

  • @zeppo@lemmy.world
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    92 years ago

    They’re a pain in the ass sometimes because I can’t say, download one and send them in certain chat programs. But you can use a program like Gimp to convert them easily.

  • @Gamey@lemmy.world
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    482 years ago

    It’s a image format with extremely good compression that’s tiny doesn’t look bad. As someone who had shitty internet for years I definitely welcome them but as usual with Googles inventions they push it on to everyone and let other browsers catch up.

  • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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    642 years ago

    Webp is an image format.

    Jpg is ancient, and gif, holy shit gif is from stone age.

    I dunno, if you’re playing a video, you probably want x264 or better these days, no? For music, we use some variant of mp4 or lossless at this point.

    Yet with pictures, for some reason we insist on the old shitty stuff.

    Using jpeg or gif is like using mp1 for music and VideoCD for video. Come on now.

    The only problem with webp is that there’s quality loss if you convert an already compressed jpeg into webp with high compression rate, like some web sites do. That can suck, but I don’t know how else to get people to use more modern formats. Otherwise we’d be using ancient formats into the 24th century.

    • @toasteecup@lemmy.world
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      32 years ago

      I mean for audio I use these large mostly black disk things…

      For nonphysical media I’m a filthy streaming whore.

    • Atemu
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      12 years ago

      For music, we use some variant of mp4 or lossless

      AAC is only 5 years younger than JPEG. Lossless music formats are about as ancient as GIF.

      • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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        32 years ago

        But requirements for audio hasn’t changed that much, and overall it’s a much older and thus mature technology, that there isn’t much left to figure out. Consumer CD format with 16bit 44.1kHz has been around for 40 years, and you don’t need much better quality than that. So there isn’t much left to figure out.

        But images and videos are different. 20 or 30 years ago you didn’t need to commonly send 20 MPix HDR photos and HD to 4k videos over the internet. Shoehorning formats that were made for 640x480 pictures and tiny silly clipart animations just doesn’t make sense, especially with all the development that’s been made in that time. Newer compression techniques can help, but you can only do so much.

        • @elephantium@lemmy.world
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          Shoehorning formats that were made for 640x480 pictures

          Err…nothing in the file format spec restricts jpg to a particular size. I would actually argue that this undermines your point – bandwidth was incredibly limited in the 90s compared to what I see today.

          Simple example: a 640x480 image is (at least) 307,200 bytes = 0.3M, so it takes at least 5.4 seconds to transmit over a 56k modem. A 4k image, same color depth, is 16000000 bytes = 15M. On a gigabit connection (what I have), that takes about 0.02 seconds.

          • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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            22 years ago

            I was taking more about quality than size in this particular comparison. In 1993 you were happy to squeeze through an image in any quality almost.

            It goes hand in hand tho.

            If you can compress a 50 MPix, 16-bit, high dynamic range image from a modern high-end DSLR to a reasonable size with a better algorithm and format, you’d also have an easier time squeezing a crappy 640x480 pic to an even smaller size. We just couldn’t do either so well 30 years ago.

            • @elephantium@lemmy.world
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              32 years ago

              Heh, in 1993 I wasn’t online at all. '97 or '98 is more like it in my case.

              That’s a fair point, too, better image quality for a given size. I was more focused on raw bandwidth demands.

    • @over_clox@lemmy.world
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      222 years ago

      The old shitty stuff was designed to compress images and stuff to be small enough to transfer on potato internet.

      Now the HTML size itself ends up larger than many of the images while they code in endless advertising and scripts.

      Old internet was better TBH.

      • @IronKrill@lemmy.ca
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        142 years ago

        This isn’t really relevant when webp is more optimised and smaller file size. People are determined to force things to be GIFs despite them looking terrible and taking up 50MB for 10 seconds of 720p looping video.

        • @over_clox@lemmy.world
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          12 years ago

          I never said GIF was all that great. Hell, beyond the fact that it was piss poor compression, it didn’t even have audio. 🤦‍♂️

          Now MPEG1/2, MP3 and JPEG weren’t all that bad, considering the era of technology they came from.

          I can definitely agree that modern compression has improved beyond that even, but at the same time now everything is automatically tagging in all sorts of extra data like, I dunno, the GPS location the image/video was taken. Like hey, let’s just broadcast everyone’s address to the rest of the world…

            • @over_clox@lemmy.world
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              -12 years ago

              Of course, yes, you can. But back then, that was usually up to the person recording the media to manually add metadata later in processing.

              These days everything is getting tagged automatically as you’re recording stuff.

              Bye bye privacy.

        • @over_clox@lemmy.world
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          32 years ago

          Oh, I forgot to mention in my other comment, as far as compression goes, what ever happened to good old MIDI? 🤔

          • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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            32 years ago

            Midi is quite literally a text format, and you can open it in anything. It’s just a matter of interpretation what comes out of it.

            • @over_clox@lemmy.world
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              22 years ago

              I’m looking at a MIDI file in a hex editor right now, it’s literally not a plain text file. Plain text files use carriage return and/or line feed characters to end a line of text. MIDI uses null to separate instrument notes and attributes.

              Also, when was the last time you tried opening a MIDI file? Seems like half the media player apps and even some operating systems don’t even natively support it anymore.

              • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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                22 years ago

                Ok apologies. But you get my point, it’s a set of instructions made for actual hardware with built-in samples. I don’t think there’s any such thing in modern computers even beyond emulation on OS level.

                Sound players are made to play sound, not instructions, and most people don’t need to play MIDIs. Even so, the actual playback experience then depends on the OS/hardware/whatever, which again is not something you expect from a sound player.

                You can always use specific software to play MIDIs, which are better equipped for it with stuff like MIDI font support, instrument selection and other stuff.

      • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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        62 years ago

        So was QuickTime and RealMedia. Today we know how to compress things better.

        Agree with the HTML sadly… Sigh.

    • @elephantium@lemmy.world
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      52 years ago

      Jpg is ancient

      Sure, but so is .zip, and that’s still useful.

      IMO a better argument would be how and why webp improves on jpg (better compression, etc), not just “it’s newer”.

      I shouldn’t need to say this, but here goes: “old” and “shitty” aren’t actually synonyms.

      • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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        32 years ago

        It is more efficient. I thought it’s obvious, that’s why web sites use it, to save traffic and potentially storage. Hence my comparison to video formats. You don’t see YouTube playing videos in Real Media format.

        It’s also more universal, combining features of jpg, png and gif. Gif especially is a dreadful format for what it’s commonly used. It was designed for tiny clipart animations, not HD video clips. Something like x265 can actually be hundreds of times more efficient.

    • @venusenvy47@lemm.ee
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      42 years ago

      Do you know if there are any formats that provide for native looping like gif? I find that feature useful for some standalone files.

          • qaz
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            I haven’t even heard of .apng, is it widely supported?

            • @DrQuint@lemmy.world
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              No, lol.

              It stands for animated png btw. It was an extension. The benefit was that it always rendered something everywhere, if it didn’t support the animation, because it would be read out as a regular (but suspiciously heavy) png in that case.

              I brought it up because it’s yet another old-ass .gif solution that didn’t stick because people love the term “gif”.

    • Ⓑⓡⓞⓚⓔⓝ
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      12 years ago

      Jpg is ancient, and gif, holy shit gif is from stone age

      Where does PNG stand in this timeline?

      • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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        72 years ago

        I think PNG is a good format even today. It’s lossless compressed, so there isn’t that much you can squeeze out of that with new algorithms as you can out of lossy formats with new and smarter approaches.

        Sadly, PNG is being terribly misused on the internet too. What it’s good for is simple drawn graphics, which it can compress to oblivion. So it’s perfect for screenshots of say, your operating system’s windows. I took a sshot as I’m typing this, and it came out as 190 kB. Not bad.

        But what it’s so commonly used for, is people taking screenshots of photos such as from Instagram, and then reposting them. So instead of a tiny and shitty 50 kB IG picture, you get a 1.5MB PNG screenshots. Some then recompress it to a 1.5MB JPG for “maximum quality” when they realise they can’t upload PNG to photo sites.

        I also very often encounter huge PNG photos with their extensions changed to JPG, and I don’t know how or why that is happening.

        • @elephantium@lemmy.world
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          22 years ago

          people taking screenshots of photos such as from Instagram

          This one really grinds my gears. Why do so many people insist on sharing text by taking a picture instead of pasting the text? Or better yet, just linking to the original? It’s such a waste of bandwidth :(

        • Jamie
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          22 years ago

          I also very often encounter huge PNG photos with their extensions changed to JPG, and I don’t know how or why that is happening.

          Probably people uploading to sites that limit extensions thinking they’re clever by just changing the extension, or being straight up wrong in thinking the extension changing actually changes the file type.

          The sites might not bother to check the metadata, and anything worth any salt that displays the image will ignore the extension anyway.

          • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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            22 years ago

            That sounds logical, but on most operating systems these days the extension is hidden, and/or you need to go through some hoops to change it. So I would think that most people who think that wouldn’t even know how to change it.

            But more importantly, where do those PNGs come from in the first place? Sure, some are clearly screenshots such as of IG or TT, but there are tons of large PNG images that are clearly photos from cameras that someone just took and resaved as png (and later, or someone else, then renamed to jpg).

            I could understand that happening occasionally for a bunch of reasons, but I’ve encountered this so many times, it’s pretty bizarre.

            Btw it’s something you might not even notice if you aren’t using e.g. an image viewer that uses a different icon or background based on actual image type.

            • Jamie
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              12 years ago

              I suppose another solution might be that it falls under those lines, but some misbehaving services where they’re uploaded are giving out improper filenames and not confirming the type.

              Though I can’t imagine many of those being incredibly popular, or, it’s just that images are recycled for so long that eventually many of them hit such a site in their lifetimes.

                • Jamie
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                  12 years ago

                  Yet you still posted it in jpeg. Can’t fool me with your sly tricks.

                  Input #0, image2, from '85974f2f-5463-40ba-93ea-45417c183fcc.jpeg':
                    Duration: 00:00:00.04, start: 0.000000, bitrate: 54211 kb/s
                    Stream #0:0: Video: mjpeg (Baseline), yuvj444p(pc, bt470bg/unknown/unknown), 1513x947, 25 fps, 25 tbr, 25 tbn
                  
              • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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                22 years ago

                After reading through more comments in this discussion, maybe I have my answer, at least partially. A lot of people here suggest to use extensions and other ways to convert webp from the web to… PNG.

                And then that PNG gets shared further…

                Oh gawd if that’s why so many pngs are on the net… What a way to take a good idea and completely fuck it up. Now instead of a 2MB jpeg or 0.5MB webp we deal with 10MB pngs 🤦‍♂️

      • qaz
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        32 years ago

        It supports features such as lossless editing and transparency but the compression is pretty bad.

        • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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          62 years ago

          It’s lossless, it’s meant for 2D and drawn graphics. Can’t do that much with lossless compression.

          • nulldev
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            It’s still bad compared to modern lossless algorithms. PNG is very old and even though PNG encoders have evolved, it is still fundamentally a decade behind modern lossless compression algorithms.

            For example: JPEG XL in lossless mode compresses at least 30% better than PNG.

            Also, PNG is not actually lossless in many cases. PNG only supports RGB colorspaces. If you try to store anything that’s not in an RGB colorspace (e.g. a frame of a video) in a PNG, you will lose some color information as colorspace conversion is not lossless. Example of someone running into this issue: https://stackoverflow.com/q/35399677

            JPEG XL supports non-RGB colorspaces so you don’t have this problem.

            • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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              22 years ago

              Okay but that difference is not as critical as with jpg, which are also more abundant. The bigger problem with png is that people use it for things it’s not meant or designed for - frame of a video being case in point.

              If anything, it just proves how lacking we are in other image formats, when we keep shoehorning clipart formats like png and gif into other duties. Well not lacking as in not having them, but not using them.

              • nulldev
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                There’s no real reason why you shouldn’t use PNG for a frame of video. I’m not talking about using it as a video format, I’m talking about extracting a frame from a video and sending it off to an editor for inclusion in another video or image.

                As a user, I would expect that I could use the most popular lossless image format if I want to losslessly share a frame from a movie with someone.

                Of course I do agree that we need adoption of other image formats. We really should not still be cramming everything in PNGs or JPGs in 2023.

                • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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                  12 years ago

                  There is, exactly because png is made for strict rgb colorspace. Especially today when videos can be in HDR and with all kinds of color correction shenanigans, so which you won’t get back once you try to put the PNG back into the video.

                  But I’m not a video editor, so I don’t know what still format is best suited for this. I imagine real editors can deal with it, and for regular people who just make screenshots for memes, it’s good enough. As I said, png is still a good enough format, but let’s not use it for stuff like converting webp photos for further sharing.

        • Shurimal
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          32 years ago

          PNG compresses like nothing else when it comes to graphs, text, UI elements, digital drawings, comics, screenshots from apps etc. And doesn’t suffer from “mosquito” artifacts and other .jpg nonsense. It was never meant to be used for photographs and other statistically “noisy” images for which .jpg works much better.

          • @WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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            22 years ago

            Isn’t it funny how the internet is full of Instagram screenshots in PNG, and Twitter screenshots in JPG?

            It feels like some extra-dimensional aliens are fucking with us and making everything backwards.

  • wilberfan
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    252 years ago

    I didn’t know this either.

    “Google launched the WebP format as part of its mission to make loading times faster across the internet. WebP allows websites to display high-quality images — but with much smaller file sizes than traditional formats such as PNG and JPEG.”

    • shootwhatsmyname
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      42 years ago

      It’s a great format—they do make websites load noticeably faster (especially with a lot of images), however it’s extra work dealing with compatibility and it does make it harder for users as they aren’t compatible with some of software/operating systems yet

      • qaz
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        32 years ago

        I’ve never encountered a program that wasn’t compatible with WebP, what are you using?

        • @IronKrill@lemmy.ca
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          I have since tailored my app choice for webp so unsure nowadays, but my experience was that Windows photos could not open them, Photoshop requires a plugin, websites don’t allow uploading them, the list went on. I love webp but the application support has been (or was) abysmal for years.

  • @BeardedPip@lemmy.world
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    272 years ago

    Google being fucking Google.

    I downloaded the Save By Type extension because it was impossible to some of my schoolwork this term due to the webp BS.

    • Dont blame google, it is Mucrisoft’s fault for refusing to support them under default windows. The format itself is in many ways superior to both PNG and JPEG.

      • @BeardedPip@lemmy.world
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        02 years ago

        If one company is pushing something (google) and several others have trouble with it (MS, Apple, Adobe) then maybe the pusher is to blame for issues?

        • Gimp, who’s developmental team consists of a bunch of volunteers supports it, the reasons those companies don’t support is is either because they don’t care about users (Adobe), or because they are pushing their own, proprietary format. (Apple) Microsoft directly competes with Google in the cloud ecosystem space and therefore wants to make using Google as painful as possible. (See microsoft making it a huge pain to switch the default browser to chrome)

          • @BeardedPip@lemmy.world
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            02 years ago

            See microsoft making it a huge pain to switch the default browser to chrome

            Are you high? Chrome dominates the browser market. This is such a blatantly terrible argument.

  • I don’t know what they are other than a file format; but I also don’t know what everyone’s problem with them is. They open in every viewer or editor I’ve used just fine so you can convert them by just saving as a new format if you’re trying to reupload them somewhere.

    • @scarabic@lemmy.world
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      102 years ago

      My gripe with them is that MacOS Finder won’t generate thumbnail previews of them and just displays a generic image icon. You’re free to say “that’s dumb, fuck Apple,” but I hope it illustrates a widespread example of how they’re aren’t as easy to deal with as JPGs and PNGs.

  • @fubo@lemmy.world
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    32 years ago

    Curiously enough, the only place where I’ve encountered WEBP files has been AI image generators. They usually offer PNG as an alternate format.

    • @Azzu@lemm.ee
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      2 years ago

      Basically everything on Lemmy is webp, btw, so you’ve probably encountered it a lot more :D

      • @fubo@lemmy.world
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        22 years ago

        Huh! Well then I should say, the only place where I’ve seen it and other options was …

  • @RoyaltyInTraining@lemmy.world
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    612 years ago

    It’s just a new picture format that is arguably better than jpeg in many scenarios. It has been around for many years. Windows just refuses to do file associations correctly, so people hate it for no reason.