a computer graphics file format.
In 1983 researchers with the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) started working on ways to add photo-quality graphics to the text-only computer terminal screens of the day. Three years later, the Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) was formed to create a new standard, named the JPEG standard, that used data compression to keep graphics files small. The JPEG standard works by averaging colour variation and discarding what the human eye cannot see, a process known as “lossy” compression. Depending on the level of compression, it is possible to compress an image by a factor of 100 to 1, though there may be some loss of quality at the compression limits. Factors of 20 to 1 are easily done, however, and the loss of quality is practically invisible to the human eye. In comparison, the loss-less graphics interchange format (GIF) only compresses by about 4 to 1.
JPEGs are used primarily on the World Wide Web and in digital cameras. Progressive JPEGs, a specific type of JPEG that initially shows a low-quality image that improves over a few passes, are especially useful for Internet users with slower connections. Many digital cameras store images as JPEGs, allowing more pictures to fit on a memory card, though cameras aimed at more-serious photographers can store uncompressed images, which retain more detail. JPEG files also have the ability to carry exchangeable image file format (EXIF) information that stores details about when a picture was taken and even settings such as exposure and shutter speed.
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