Settings

Theme

JPEG XL Test Page

tildeweb.nl

242 points by roywashere 11 days ago · 169 comments

Reader

senfiaj 11 days ago

Starting from v145 Chrome supports JXL.

There is also an extension for this: https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/jpeg-xl-viewer/bkhd...

  • pkulak 11 days ago
    • Santosh83 10 days ago

      Wonderful. Allow an "unmonitored" extension from a random stranger on the Internet have access to "all data for all websites" just to support an image format for which Mozilla should have long built in native support...

      • Vinnl 10 days ago

        Security concerns are exactly the reason the format doesn't have native support yet. However: https://github.com/mozilla/standards-positions/pull/1064

        • bmacho 10 days ago

          That's not the reason, but the excuse. The reason Firefox doesn't have jxl is that it is funded by Google, and someone at Google decided that it has to die.

          Also the parent comment was about that you really shouldn't just let a random Russian guy run any javascript on any website you visit, that's stupid.

          Also also, am I missing something, or Firefox extensions are broken, there is no way to limit an extension to websites (allow or disallow), or even just to check the source code of an extension?

          • Vinnl 7 days ago

            The link I posted shows that Jpeg-XL will come to Firefox, and that that same Google is the one making that possible by writing a secure implementation.

          • lonjil 10 days ago

            > That's not the reason, but the excuse. The reason firefox doesn't have jxl is that it is funded by Google, and someone at Google decided that it has to die.

            So what, you think they were just lying when they said that they'll ship JXL when it has a Rust implementation? You think Mozilla devs were just bluffing when they were working directly with the JXL devs over the last year to make sure everything would work right?

            • bmacho 10 days ago

              No, I don't think they can withhold support if it's a no-brainer to support it. But they also tried everything they could to not support it.

      • mikae1 9 days ago

        This...

        I would not install non-recommended Firefox addons for things that can be achieved in about:config.

        Just do set image.jxl.enabled flag in about:config to true.

    • iam-TJ 10 days ago

      Firefox Nightly v149 has added experimental support via Settings > Firefox Labs:

        Webpage Display
        Media: JPEG XL
        With this feature enabled, Nightly supports the JPEG XL (JXL) format. This is an enhanced image file format that supports lossless transition from traditional JPEG files. See bug 1539075 for more details.
    • breve 11 days ago

      It's a good use case for WebAssembly. For browsers that don't yet support JPEG XL natively the page could provide a wasm decoder.

      Like this demo page: https://bevara.github.io/Showcase/libjxl/

thisislife2 11 days ago

Also checkout - https://jpegxl.info/resources/jpeg-xl-test-page

Works great on PaleMoon, one of the earliest browsers to support JPEG XL and "Global Privacy Control" ( https://globalprivacycontrol.org/ ).

demetris 10 days ago

I published some benchmarks recently:

https://op111.net/posts/2025/10/png-and-modern-formats-lossl...

I compare PNG and the four modern formats, AVIF, HEIF, WebP, JPEG XL, on tasks/images that PNG was designed for. (Not on photographs or lossy compression.)

  • tasty_freeze 10 days ago

    It seems like the natural categories are (1) photographs of real things, (2) line art, (3) illustrator images, (4) text content (eg, from a scanned document).

    Is there a reason you used only synthetic images, ie, nothing from group 1?

    • demetris 10 days ago

      Hey, tasty_freeze!

      The motivation behind the benchmarks was to understand what are the options today for optimizing the types of image we use PNG for, so I used the same set of images I had used previously in a comparison of PNG optimizers.

      The reason the set does not have photographs: PNG is not good at photographs. It was not designed for that type of image.

      Even so, the set could do with a bit more variety, so I want to add a few more images.

  • enimodas 10 days ago

    Would be nice to also see decompression speed and maybe a photo as a bonus round.

    • demetris 10 days ago

      Yeah.

      Numbers for decompression speed is one of the two things I want to add.

      The other is a few more images, for more variety.

      • tedd4u 10 days ago

        Max memory required during decompression is also important. Thanks for sharing this research.

gcr 11 days ago

One thing I like about JPEG-XL is that it supports all kinds of weird image formats.

For example, I used to work with depth data a lot, which is best expressed as monochrome 16-bit floating point images. Previously, TIFF was the only format that supported this. Many shops would instead save depth images as UINT16 .PNG files, where the raw pixel intensity maps to the camera distance in mm. The problem with this is that pixels more than 65.535 meters away aren't representable. (Hot take: I personally think this is one reason why nobody studies depth estimation for outdoor scenes.)

JPEG-XL supports more weird combinations here, e.g. storing greyscale float32 images (with alpha even! you can store sparse depth maps without needing a separate mask!)

It's like, uniquely suited to these sorts of 3D scene understanding challenges and I really hope people adopt the format for more scientific applications.

  • GuB-42 10 days ago

    > One thing I like about JPEG-XL is that it supports all kinds of weird image formats.

    And it is probably the reason why browser vendors disliked it. Lots of complexity, it means a big library, which is high maintenance with a big attack surface. By comparison, webp is "free" if you have webm, as webp is essentially a single frame video.

    • edflsafoiewq 10 days ago

      AFAIK browsers do not reuse any VP8 codepath for WebP, they just use libwebp, which decodes lossy images in software. WebP has a non-VP8 lossless mode too. The concern about image format attack surface is also probably because of the recent exploit in libwebp.

  • somat 10 days ago

    On the subject of tiff, why is it not used more? I mean, it is more or less really a container format right. Why are we not using it all over the place but with modern compression methods?

    • jasomill 10 days ago

      It is used quite a bit.

      As just one of innumerable examples, it's the basis for Adobe's DNG raw photo format and many proprietary raw formats used by camera manufacturers (Nikon NEF, Canon CRW and CR2, etc.).

      Speaking as an outside observer, the ISO Base Media File Format seems to have more mindshare for newer applications, presumably on account of its broader scope and cleaner design.

  • JBorrow 11 days ago

    There is also FITS, but that is mainly for astronomical applications (and is in general an insane and terrible format). But it supports tons of types!

p_ing 11 days ago

Orion, and presumably other Webkit-based browsers that are actually up-to-date, can also see the image.

Hopefully my photo processor will accept JPEG XL in the near future!

  • nine_k 11 days ago

    Chromium 143 (the latest available in Void Linux, a rolling-release distro) still can't.

    The chrome://flags/#enable-jxl-image-format is not even found in the build :(

  • RicoElectrico 11 days ago

    > Hopefully my photo processor will accept JPEG XL in the near future!

    Aren't print shops, machining shops, other small manufacturers etc. ones that always lag behind with emerging technologies?

    • sanjit 11 days ago

      Designers might also be hesitant to use an untested file format for print, too.

      If there’s a large amount of paper that’s been purchased for a job, I definitely wouldn’t want to be the one who’s responsible for using JPEG XL and – for whatever reason – something going wrong.

      Pixels are cheaper than paper or other physical media :)

    • p_ing 11 days ago

      Yes, because those systems cost gobs of money. You don't replace them just for the hot new thing.

      • Dylan16807 11 days ago

        Replace? Why bring that up?

        The company that owns whatever system can and should be able to convert formats.

        • p_ing 11 days ago

          They request formats that their equipment handles. They're not in the business of converting a user's file type from one to another. That would be inconsistent from what the user sent.

          Here's who I order from, you can see the particulars of what they request.

          https://support.bayphoto.com/hc/en-us/articles/4026658357979...

          • Dylan16807 11 days ago

            > They're not in the business of converting a user's file type from one to another.

            Their job is getting an image file into reality, not to be the absent owner of a big machine.

            > That would be inconsistent from what the user sent.

            If the machine accepts some type of normal image file, then they can losslessly convert other file formats to that type. There is nothing inconsistent about that.

            • p_ing 10 days ago

              You're free to make such assumptions.

              • Dylan16807 10 days ago

                What are you calling an assumption?

                My first statement is an opinion/judgement, not an assumption.

                I'm confident my second statement is true. Note that any argument that says niche formats are a problem because color space might be ambiguous also applies to the formats they do accept.

                • diroussel 8 days ago

                  Who should accept responsibility when a conversion is not as expected?

                  There are very few ‘lossless” conversions possible if you consider the loss of a data or metadata could affect the result. So if printer did accept a file that needed to be converted, and then during printing and converting they found conversion could lead to unexpected results should they cancel the print run? There is just too much to go wrong in printing already without these extra problems.

                  The print industry has a long and storied history, and for whatever set of reasons, printers only accept very specific profiles of specific formats.

                  • Dylan16807 6 days ago

                    > Who should accept responsibility when a conversion is not as expected?

                    Who does it already? The system already takes files that could have unexpected results.

                    It's likely that if they took some other reasonable file types while always pre-converting they could actually reduce the error rate.

  • pkulak 11 days ago

    Yup, Gnome Web loads it just fine! Man, it really is a great browser. I try to switch to it every 6 months, but then I remember that it doesn't support extensions at all. I could give up everything, but not 1Password. Nothing is worth copy/pasting credentials and losing passkeys entirely.

    • encrypted_bird 11 days ago

      Have you tried KeePassXL with SyncThing? I've heard good things about that setup.

      • Dylan16807 10 days ago

        For what purpose? While it's a perfectly good password manager, when used with Gnome Web it also means copy/pasting passwords and losing passkeys. Doesn't it?

        • encrypted_bird 10 days ago

          When I commented that, I did not realize Gnome Web was a web browser (I'd never heard of it frankly), let alone a non-Firefox-based browser. Lol.

numbers 11 days ago

I'm seeing the image on zen which is a firefox fork but not on firefox itself :/

even with `image.jxl.enabled` I don't see it on firefox

  • capitainenemo 11 days ago

    Checking the Firefox bugs on this, it seems they decided to replace the C++ libjxl with a rust version which is a WIP, to address security concerns with the implementation. All this started a few months ago.

    Maybe the zen fork is a bit older and still using the C++ one?

    • capitainenemo 11 days ago

      ... update. after reading the comments in the rust migration security bug, I saw they mentioned "only building in nightly for now"

      I grabbed the nightly firefox, flipped the jxl switch, and it does indeed render fine, so I guess the rust implementation is functioning, just not enabled in stable.

      ... also, I see no evidence that it was ever enabled in the stable builds, even for the C++ version, so I'm guessing Zen just turned it on. Which... is fine, but maybe not very cautious.

      • awestroke 11 days ago

        zen browser is pretty much vibe coded

        • nar001 10 days ago

          Do you have any proof/more about this? I've never heard this claim and I'd like to know more

          • awestroke 9 days ago

            1. Zen Browser had remote debugging enabled by default and disabled the security prompt for it. Extreme incompetence or malice? https://github.com/zen-browser/desktop/pull/927

            2. Social trackers are selectively allowed, unsigned extensions are enabled by default, and Enhanced Tracking Protection isn't fully implemented.

            There's just a theme of incompetence, trying to cover it up and just in general being clueless about security.

    • bpbp-mango 11 days ago

      good. image parsing has produced so many bad RCEs.

    • rkangel 10 days ago

      Google Chrome is using a Rust implementation. The existence and sufficient maturity of it is the reason they were willing to merge support in the first place.

      • illiac786 10 days ago

        Hmmm, check the jxl-rs repository. I wouldn’t call it mature. Not to say it’s buggy, but most of its code is very fresh.

  • dietr1ch 11 days ago

    Flipping `image.jxl.enabled` made it work for me after refreshing the page. I'm using Librewolf 146.0.1-1, but I guess it works just fine in firefox 146

ChrisArchitect 11 days ago

Related:

Chromium Has Merged JpegXL

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46597927

rhdunn 11 days ago

Works in ladybird as well.

jiggawatts 11 days ago

Support is not a boolean.

A proper test page should have HDR images, images testing if 10-bit gradients are posterised to 8-bit or displayed smoothly, etc...

iOS for example can show a JPEG XL image, but can't forward it in iMessage to someone else.

uyzstvqs 11 days ago

JPEG XL is also good, but why not use AVIF? It's widely supported by browsers, and rivals JPEG XL in being the best lossy image format.

  • judah 11 days ago

    Jake Archibald has an excellent post about progressive image rendering, including some metrics on JPEG XL compared to AVIF[0].

    > "I was also surprised to see that, in Safari, JPEG XL takes 150% longer (as in 2.5x) to decode vs an equivalent AVIF. That's 17ms longer on my M4 Pro. Apple hardware tends to be high-end, but this could still be significant. This isn't related to progressive rendering; the decoder is just slow. There's some suggestion that the Apple implementation is running on a single core, so maybe there's room for improvement.

    > JPEG XL support in Safari actually comes from the underlying OS rather than the browser. My guess is that Apple is considering using JPEG XL for iPhone photo storage rather than HEIC, and JPEG XL's inclusion in the browser is a bit of an afterthought. I'm just guessing though.

    > The implementation that was in Chromium behind a flag did support progressive rendering to some degree, but it didn't render anything until ~60 kB (39% of the file). The rendering is similar to the initial JPEG rendering above, but takes much more image data to get there. This is a weakness in the decoder rather than the format itself. I'll dive into what JPEG XL is capable of shortly.

    > I also tested the performance of the old behind-a-flag Chromium JPEG XL decoder, and it's over 500% slower (6x) to decode than AVIF. The old behind-a-flag Firefox JPEG XL decoder is about as slow as the Safari decoder. It's not fair to judge the performance of experimental unreleased things, but I was kinda hoping one of these would suggest that the Safari implementation was an outlier.

    > I thought that "fast decoding" was one of the selling points of JPEG XL over AVIF, but now I'm not so sure.

    > We have a Rust implementation of JPEG XL underway in Firefox, but performance needs to get a lot better before we can land it."

    [0]: https://jakearchibald.com/2025/present-and-future-of-progres...

    • jomohke 11 days ago

      Strange, as Cloudinary's test had the opposite conclusion -- jpegxl was significantly faster to decode than avif. Did the decoders change rapidly in a year, or was it a switch to new ones (the rust reimplementation)?

      https://cloudinary.com/blog/jpeg-xl-and-the-pareto-front

      If decode speed is an issue, it's notable that avif varied a lot depending on encode settings in their test:

      > Interestingly, the decode speed of AVIF depends on how the image was encoded: it is faster when using the faster-but-slightly-worse multi-tile encoding, slower when using the default single-tile encoding.

    • N19PEDL2 10 days ago

      >> My guess is that Apple is considering using JPEG XL for iPhone photo storage rather than HEIC, and JPEG XL's inclusion in the browser is a bit of an afterthought.

      This would be great.

    • quentindanjou 11 days ago

      I am curious, isn't AVIF also taking advantage of the hardware decoding democratized by AV1?

      • michaelt 11 days ago

        Taking advantage of hardware decoding is generally like pulling teeth.

        For video you can't avoid it, as people expect several hours of laptop battery life while playing video. But for static images - I'd avoid the pain.

  • F3nd0 11 days ago

    Because JPEG XL is the first format to actually bring significant improvements across the board. In some aspects AVIF comes close, in others it falls far behind, and in some it can’t even compete. There’s just nothing else like JPEG XL and I think it deserves to be supported everywhere as a truly universal image codec.

  • Socket-232 11 days ago

    Why use AVIF when JPEG XL is much better and in a few weeks almost universally supported?

dlcarrier 11 days ago

Are there any up-to-date WebKit browsers for Android? The best I could find was Lightning, but it hasn't been updated in years.

Edit: I found A Lightning fork called Fulguris. It didn't work with the JPEG XL test image, but I really like the features and customizability. It's now my default browser on Android.

cubefox 11 days ago

According to CanIUse, no browser implementation currently supports progressive decoding [1]. This is unfortunate, since progressive decoding theoretically is a major advantage of JPEG XL over AVIF, which doesn't allow it in principle, even though ordinary JPEG allows it. But apparently even a default (non-progressive) JPEG XL allows some limited form of progressive decoding [2]. It's unclear whether browsers support it though.

1: https://caniuse.com/jpegxl

2: https://youtube.com/watch?v=inQxEBn831w

samtheDamned 11 days ago

A rare win for gnome web over firefox here

blell 11 days ago

Alright, that image made be really miss Lenna as an example image.

  • volemo 11 days ago

    I understand why people avoid it now; however, having not seen the uncropped version for a long time initially, I have only warm associations.

reef_sh 11 days ago

On Waterfox. Image displays fine.

hotsalad 11 days ago

I enabled image.jxl.enabled in LibreWolf and works. It doesn't work in Firefox Beta, though?

antonyh 11 days ago

Epiphany (aka Gnome Web) on Linux shows this correctly, as expected for a Webkit-based browser.

gary_0 11 days ago

If I download the image, Fedora KDE shows it properly in Dolphin and Gwenview.

ajdude 11 days ago

> this means only Safari will display the image, as far as I know.

Works fine for me in Orion on both desktop and mobile ( https://orionbrowser.com ).

bigbuppo 11 days ago

Looks like the sort of person that would create a superior image file format.

Incipient 9 days ago

Very good benchmark. Concise yet detailed. I like the selection of images. I wanted to see at least one actual camera photo however, for comparison.

unglaublich 11 days ago

I think JPEG XL's naming was unfortunate. People want to associate new image formats with leanness, lightness, efficiency.

  • fleabitdev 11 days ago

    There was a constraint - since 2009, the Joint Photographic Experts Group had published JPEG XR, JPEG XT and JPEG XS, and they were probably reluctant to break that naming scheme.

    They're running out of good options, but I hope they stick with it long enough to release "JPEG XP" :-)

  • snowram 11 days ago

    Considering "jpeg" has become the shorthand for "digital picture", it would be a shame not to capitalise on it.

    • flexagoon 11 days ago

      I feel like "jpeg" has generally become a shorthand for "low quality compressed digital picture"

      • goda90 11 days ago

        Hence the meme response "Needs more jpeg" https://old.reddit.com/r/explainlikeimfive/comments/2ct3ax/e...

      • benbristow 11 days ago

        In the photography world it's shorthand for "photo unedited straight from the camera". Popular with Fujifilm cameras especially due to their 'film simulation' modes which apply basically a filter to the image.

        • doubletwoyou 11 days ago

          Not really? Unedited would be some sort of raw. JPEG usually implies preprocessed by the camera

          • benbristow 11 days ago

            I guess I meant unedited by the photographer manually (e.g. using Lightroom etc.)

            Either that or a photo that has been edited from a RAW and is a final version to be posted online.

      • dylan604 11 days ago

        I feel like you need to find better places on the internet. It's no longer 1997 downloading from dial up.

        • notatoad 11 days ago

          What makes jpeg compression bad isn’t low bandwidth. It’s really good at compressing an image for that.

          What makes jpeg bad is that the compression artifacts multiply when a jpeg gets screen captured and then re-encoded as a jpeg, or automatically resized and recompressed by a social media platform. And that definitely isn’t a problem that has gone away since dialup, people do that more than ever.

        • flexagoon 10 days ago

          I'm not saying it's true, I obviously understand that not all jpegs are low quality and over compressed. That's just how the word is generally used by people, especially those outside of tech who aren't well versed in different image formats.

      • dgan 11 days ago

        "diJital PEGchure"

      • bigbuppo 11 days ago

        Nah, that's WEBP, the most hated file format.

    • zamadatix 11 days ago

      JPEG XS :D

  • F3nd0 11 days ago

    It seems to me this point of discussion always tends to get way too much focus. Should it really raise concern?

    Of all the people who interact with image formats in some way, how many do even know what an image format is? How many even notice they’ve got different names? How many even give them any consideration? And out of those, how many are immediately going to think JPEG XL must be big, heavy and inefficient? And out of those, how many are going to stop there without considering that maybe the new image format could actually be pretty good? Sure, there might be some, but I really don’t think it’s a fraction of a significant size.

    Moreover, how many people in said fraction are going to remember the name (and thus perhaps the format) far more easily by remembering it’s got such a stupid name?

  • bobmcnamara 11 days ago

    I found it unfortunate because it's not a JPEG.

    • Dwedit 11 days ago

      It has an operation mode where it can losslessly and reversibly compress a JPEG further, and "not a jpeg" wouldn't cover that.

      • dragonwriter 11 days ago

        JPEG XL is the thing that makes your JPEG smaller?

        • Dwedit 11 days ago

          JPEG XL is basically 4 codecs in one...

          * A new lossy image Codec

          * A lossless image codec (lossless modular mode)

          * An alternative lossy image codec with different kinds of compression artifacts than those typically seen in JPEG (lossy modular mode)

          * JPEG packer

          Because it includes a JPEG packer, you can use it as such.

  • edflsafoiewq 11 days ago

    Just call it JXL.

  • formerly_proven 11 days ago

    Nobody can keep you from forking the spec and calling yours JPEG SM.

  • OscarTheGrinch 11 days ago

    Crappy as a .jpg, only bigger.

    Actually, I remember when JPEG XL came out, and I just thought: cool, file that one away for when I have a really big image I need to display. Which turned out to be never.

    Names have consequences.

    • gcr 11 days ago

      I regularly work with images larger than 65,535px per side.

      WEBP can only do 16,383px per side and the AVIF spec can technically do 65,535, but encoders tap out far before then. Even TIFF uses 32-bit file offsets so can't go above 4GB without custom extensions.

      Guess which format, true to its name, happens to support 1,073,741,823px per side? :-)

    • crazygringo 11 days ago

      > Crappy as a .jpg, only bigger.

      Honestly, that's exactly what it sounds like to me too. I know it's not, but it's still what it sounds like. And it's just way too many letters total. When we have "giff" and "ping" as one-syllable names, "jay-peg-ex-ell" is unfortunate.

      Really should have been an entirely new name, rather than extending what is already an ugly acronym.

  • bigbuppo 11 days ago

    It's JPEG Extra Lovely.

  • catskull 11 days ago

    μJPEG

  • bigbuppo 11 days ago

    And yet WEBP decided to associate itself with urine, which google then forced on everyone using their monopoly power.

  • DominoTree 11 days ago

    JPEG 15 Pro Max

  • Almondsetat 11 days ago

    Do you have anything to back this up?

sailfast 11 days ago

Works on FireFox Focus on mobile, FWIW. (Latest iOS)

ivanjermakov 11 days ago

https://caniuse.com/jpegxl

Surprised to see it working on iOS 17.

mattlondon 11 days ago

Presumably the "January 2027" statement is a typo, ...or is that when it is slated to launch in safari?

PlatoIsADisease 11 days ago

Yep, doesnt work on firefox or chrome.

jbverschoor 11 days ago

Cannot see it with lockdown mode iOS

Imustaskforhelp 11 days ago

On zen. It works.

Redster 11 days ago

I can see the image just fine on Thorium!

jiehong 10 days ago

> more or less means only Safari will display the image

Who is going to take the bait, and say that Safari isn't like IE?

oldcoot 11 days ago

Looks like it works in Brave

jordemort 11 days ago

Works in Waterfox (6.6.8)

billynomates 10 days ago

Unrelated but I read "it did not saw" and immediately thought, this person is Dutch. Then I saw the .nl domain. Not sure if this double-conjugation mistake is common in other ESL speakers but I hear it a lot living in the Netherlands.

thatgerhard 10 days ago

Is the selectable text a safari thing or a JPEG XL thing?

  • Alcor 10 days ago

    "Live Text" is a iOS/macOS feature. Works in Safari, camera, photos.app, etc…

adzm 11 days ago

Honestly I was hoping for a page showing off more of jpeg xl features rather than just a single image

  • wmwragg 11 days ago

    You probably want the JPEG XL Info[1] site then. A nice site outlining what JPEG XL actually is.

    [1] https://jpegxl.info/

    • amarant 11 days ago

      While I get why, it bugs me that they have comparison images between jxl and other formats, yet it doesn't actually use jxl, as evidenced by all images displaying correctly on my chrome browser.

gforce_de 10 days ago

can you please:

* add an correct HTML image alt information

* compress your HTML and CSS with brotli (or gzip)

thanks!

davidhyde 11 days ago

Works with Waterfox on macOS but curiously not Firefox. I wonder if their search deal with Google included keeping the image.jxl.enabled setting off.

  • F3nd0 11 days ago

    That’s an interesting speculation, but I’m inclined to believe their official reasoning. (That being they just didn’t really care about the format and/or went with whatever Chrome said at first. A year or so later they changed their mind and said they wanted an implementation in a memory-safe language, which prompted the JXL team to work on it.)

  • quaintdev 11 days ago

    Works on Zen as well.

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection