A place to seek advice and answers on those particularly challenging issues.
7 posts Page 1 of 1
When I save an image with the .png extension, I get a pop up that asks "None or Interlaced." What does "interlaced" mean? And which should I choose? (I have been selecting "none")

It was suggested I use the .png extension for printing on T-shirts .. what if you want to have a greeting card printed .. is the .png extension neccesary?

Thanks in advance for your comments.
Live every minute for all that is in it!
can't tell you what either means. I'm sure someone can.

I just hit yes and go from there. Not even sure which one is picked. Always worked just fine. :bigwink:
~kimi~
Gone Crazy... Back Soon...


Gallery ~ a la kimi

My Blog

kimboustany.com
The only difference that I know is that an interlaced PNG, when shown on a website, is shown gradually from top to bottom. Normal PNGs are shown when their data has fully loaded.
Reka
CS3 on Vista, Nikon D40 (50mm1.4, 18-55mm and 70-300mm VR) and FIREFOX
ImageMOM

My galleries <------------------> My blog
Not quite right about the PNG there. We're mainly talking about the differences when used on the web. When a GIF or JPG are interlaced, yes, it looks like stripes building up. A fast connection hardly notices it now, while on a slow dial-up connection it would be clearer.If they are not interlaced, then the browser has to wait until the full image has downloaded before displaying it.

The PNG can have interlacing, but the outline and shape of the image start to build up together - as it downloads it makes its required space known to the browser and fills the gap instantly, but (if your connection were slow enough for you to see it) it starts off fuzzy and gradually 'sharpens'. I say 'gradually' but we're talking very small fractions of a second here. A non-interlaced PNG works the same way as a non-interlaced JPG or GIF - it has to download completely before appearing.

In real terms, nowadays, it makes very little difference to most people. Back in 1995 when the 'algorithm' was first created, fast download times were vital - there used to be a phrase that said that if a webpage hadn't loaded in 26 seconds (!) people would just move on to something else.

The main advantage of a PNG now is that it can have transparent areas - so pictures no longer really need to be rectangular (GIFs have been able to have transparent areas, but they use much fewer colours and are not good at detail). PNGs have transparency and are at least as sharp as (but bigger than) JPGs, as the PNG compression is not 'lossy'.

Many people say that we should forget JPG entirely, now that connections are faster. They may have a point.

All the best,

Geoff
PSE6 on WinXP, Pentax K10d...... and now a Canon G10.

Gallery
Geoff... that was a very interesting read. Thanks so much for the lesson. I had no idea. :wave:
All I knew of a png was it allowed me to have a transparent background.
~kimi~
Gone Crazy... Back Soon...


Gallery ~ a la kimi

My Blog

kimboustany.com
wowzer ... thanks for that information Geoff ... I really appreciate it .. and it is much clearer now! :chickendance:
Live every minute for all that is in it!
Thanks, Geoff. Good info. :thanks:
This too shall pass. Is that so? Maybe.
GAIL
http://www.prestophoto.com/photos/gallery/18518
7 posts Page 1 of 1

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests

cron