With unlimited data plans becoming increasingly expensive, or subscribers being forced to ditch their unlimited data due to overuse, anything that can reduce the amount of data we download is welcome. This is especially true for media including images or video, and Google just delivered a major gain when it comes to viewing images online.
The clever scientists at Google Research have come up with a new technique for keeping image size to an absolute minimum without sacrificing quality. So good is this new technique that it promises to reduce the size of an image on disk by as much as 75 percent.
The new technique is called RAISR, which stands for "Rapid and Accurate Image Super-Resolution." Typically, reducing the size of an image means lowering its quality or resolution. RAISR works by taking a low-resolution image and upsampling it, which basically means enhancing the detail using filtering. Anyone who's ever tried to do this manually knows that the end result looks a little blurred. RAISR avoids that thanks to machine learning.
[...] RAISR has been trained using low and high quality versions of images. Machine learning allows the system to figure out the best filters to recreate the high quality image using only the low quality version. What you end up with after lots of training is a system that can do the same high quality upsampling on most images without needing the high quality version for reference.
-- submitted from IRC
(Score: 2) by Bot on Friday January 20 2017, @01:20AM
google pls
whatever savings in size and speed of web elements means only that the page will cram more of it.
Let us go to tiffs and resurrect the javascript engine of netscape navigator. So finally the web pages will return to be pages.
Seriously I see a better way to use this algo: to improve (sharpen, denoise, color correction) existing photos and video without resizing them.
Account abandoned.
(Score: 2) by takyon on Friday January 20 2017, @09:41AM
Optimize for size? I guess the Google Fiber experiment really is dead! Or mobile just really sucks!
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]
(Score: 2) by lizardloop on Friday January 20 2017, @12:40PM
This was my immediate thought. Every attempt to make browsing the web faster has been met with just cramming more shit on to every page.