I love PNG for many things. But when dealing with Raw portability sometimes a Tiff is needed. The real challenge is what is your end goal and what are you looking to do with it. I acutually use JPG to protect my images from full theft because only i have access to the 100% RAW image. my Jpg's at best go our as 80 of the original and at most 1/4th the resolution. 4000x6000 rendered to 1080x1920


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On Sun, Nov 12, 2017 at 6:53 AM, Matthew Crews <mailinglists@mattcrews.com> wrote:
TIFF is basically a bitmap format (1 pixel = 1 byte per color value, so 1 pixel = 3 bytes for a 24-bit image). TIFF does have a compression option,

PNG is a lossless compression, not unlike a ZIP archive, but with an efficient compression algorithm. Though not a perfect analogy, 1 pixel <= 3 bytes. PNG also supports an alpha layer (transparency), which isn't important unless you want it to be.

For example, I just took a screenshot of my desktop. Screen resolution is 1920x1080 @ 32-bit, so 8,294,400 bytes of pixel information are required (1920x1080 pixels * 4 bytes per pixel (RGB values + alpha value)) . The corresponding PNG came out to 1,969,094 bytes, whereas an equivalent TIFF with built-in compression is 2,371,201 bytes. An uncompressed TIF is 8,294,843 bytes, slightly larger than the raw pixel information.

There may be use cases where TIF is a better option, but for the lay person, PNG is better.

Cheers,

-Matt



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>-------- Original Message --------
>Subject: png or tiff
>Local Time: November 12, 2017 6:28 AM
>UTC Time: November 12, 2017 1:28 PM
>From: bmike1@gmail.com
>To: PLUG <plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org>
>
>it was recommended to me to save lossless pictures as PNG. why not TIFF?
>
>--
>:-)~MIKE~(-:
>
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