Hi all,

Perhaps of interest to MCN-L subscribers who haven't seen it elsewhere,
this just out from the UK. A quick glance at the report (URL below)
suggests that it offers a quite well-grounded and up-to-date synopsis of
JPEG 2000's technical "fit" with institutional image repositories of
many sorts (not solely preservation repositories in a strict DP sense).

cheers,
Rob
______________________________________________
Rob Lancefield (rlancefield [at] wesleyan.edu)
Manager of Museum Information Services / Registrar of Collections
Davison Art Center, Wesleyan University
301 High Street, Middletown CT 06459-0487 USA
860.685.2965
Vice President / President-Elect, Museum Computer Network (MCN)


-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [DIGLIB] JPEG 2000 a great step forward for the archival community
Date:   Wed, 20 Feb 2008 11:14:18 +0100
From:   Carol Jackson <ca...@dpconline.org>

***Apologies for Cross Postings***

JPEG 2000 a great step forward for the archival community

The Digital Preservation Coalition has examined JPEG 2000 in a report
published today.  The report concludes that JPEG 2000 represents a great
stride forward for the archival community.  The format now allows for
greater compression rates and a recompression rate that is visually
lossless.

The findings come as the Digital Preservation Coalition launch its
latest ?Technology Watch Report? written by Dr. Robert Buckley, a
Research Fellow with Xerox, ?JPEG 2000 ? a practical digital
preservation standard??.  The report looks in-depth at the new format
and the challenges it has to cope with.  JPEG 2000 is widely used to
collect and distribute a variety of images from geospatial, medical
imaging, digital cinema, and image repositories to networked images.
Interest in JPEG 2000 is now growing in the archival and library
sectors, as institutions look for more efficient formats to store the
results of major digitisation programmes.

The report is aimed at organisations involved in the management and
storage of digital information.  The in-depth report will help archives,
libraries and other institutions make informed decisions about JPEG 2000
format and their future storage needs.

JPEG 2000 can reduce storage requirements by an order of magnitude
compared to an uncompressed TIFF file.  Dr. Buckley says, ?This new
format has come at a time of heightened awareness about the access to
digital documents.  Any format that can assist archives and libraries to
do this is welcome.?

The format will also enable users to open as much of the file as they
need at that time.  This means a viewer, for example, could open a
gigapixel image almost instantly.   This is achieved by retrieving a
decompressed low?resolution display sized image from the JPEG 2000
codestream.  Coupled with this, the users? ability to zoom, pan and
rotate an image have been enhanced.

Adrian Brown, head of digital preservation, The National Archives said:
?This is a very timely addition to the DPC's Technology Watch Report
series as many organisations are themselves reviewing the JPEG2000
format. This concise, comprehensive and clear guide will be of interest
to practitioners across the digital preservation community.?

The report concludes that JPEG 2000 offers much more flexibility and
features than JPEG, but at the cost of greater complexity.  It is
however a great stride forward, and of major significance for the
information management community.

To download a pdf of the report please go to:
www.dpconline.org/graphics/reports/index.html#twr0801
<http://www.dpconline.org/graphics/reports/index.html#twr0801>

For further information please contact, Tim Matthews,
tim.matthews at nationalarchives.gov.uk
<mailto:tim.matthews at nationalarchives.gov.uk>, or 020 8392 5277.

For further information on the DPC  please contact, Frances Boyle,
fb at dpconline.org <mailto:fb at dpconline.org> or 01904 435320.

*_ _*

*About The Digital Preservation Coalition  (DPC)*

The Digital Preservation Coalition  (DPC) is a cross sectoral member
organisation established in 2001 to foster joint action to address the
urgent challenges of securing the preservation of digital resources in
the UK and to work with others internationally

************************************************************************************************************************************

Carol Jackson
Administration and Events Manager
Digital Preservation Coalition
Innovation Centre
York Science Park
Heslington
YO10 5DG
e-mail: carol at dpconline.org <mailto:carol at dpconline.org>
tel: +44 (0) 1904 435 362
https: www.dpconline.org <http://www.dpconline.org>

*************************************************************************************************************************************


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