Comment by hbn
2 days ago
So is this another image format I'll download and be unable to use without converting because nothing supports it a la .webp?
2 days ago
So is this another image format I'll download and be unable to use without converting because nothing supports it a la .webp?
What do you think doesn't support it?
Affinity supports it. Photoshop supports it. Microsoft Photos supports it. Gimp supports it. Apple has had systemwide support for it since iOS 17+ / macOS 12+, including in Safari and basically any app that uses the system image functions.
Chromium isn't on the bleeding edge here. They actually were when it first came out, but then retreated and waited, and now they're back again.
Lots of stuft still doesn't support it, for example WhatsApp and Discord.
WhatsApp doesn't even support WebP though. Hopefully, if they ever get around to adding WebP, they'll throw JXL in, too.
Discord certainly supports it (on web and desktop client). I've been able to upload high resolution WebP images for at least a year now.
Half the point of JPEG XL is support for HDR and higher than 8 bits per channel. Most of the apps you listed don’t support that fully, especially iOS, which converts everything to SDR or shows garbage — except for their own proprietary gain map encoding that their camera app produces.
Actually, in my recent vibe coding adventures I tested making a ProRAW converter app that also applied the included gain map to the image and encoded via libjxl on device. Surprisingly, Photos.app was able to display the converted image with HDR, but the HDR tag in the UI is only displayed for images with the proprietary gain map.
There seems to be some support there, though I tested on iOS 26.
3 replies →
Use better software - ideally open source software so that in the worst case you can just add support yourself.
I mean even Microsoft (that Titan of Lightning-Fast Development) has implemented a JPEG XL add-on, so now that Google's giving up the ghost, i think JPEG XL has a real chance.
https://apps.microsoft.com/detail/9MZPRTH5C0TB?hl=en-us&gl=U...
Only for win11
Yes, just like any new format, there's going to be an adoption period of about a decade before it reaches "ubiquitous-enough" support.