- From: Thomas Phinney <tphinney@cal.berkeley.edu>
- Date: Fri, 30 Mar 2012 14:26:57 -0700
- To: www-font@w3.org
On Fri, Mar 30, 2012 at 2:05 PM, John Daggett <jdaggett@mozilla.com> wrote: > Vladimir Levantovsky wrote: > >> 3) I’d like to commend Raph for his efforts in dissecting the MTX >> and creating a new, much more efficient compression engine and its >> reference implementation that allows to precisely quantify the >> individual contribution of each processing/optimization step to >> overall compression efficiency. By doing this he enables us to have >> an informed and intelligent discussion where each piece of the >> compression puzzle can be evaluated based on its complexity and >> resulting data reduction percentage, and where the final decision on >> the new compression algorithm and stream format can be made based on >> real-life experimental results and not just paper specs. Great job, >> Raph! > > I'd like to chime in here and also thank Raph and his group for doing all > the legwork involved in putting this proposal together. Just as Vlad describes, > the work that's been done so far gives us enough tools to begin to analyze > the strengths and weaknesses of the proposal by comparing the results for > real-world situations. Now that I've had time to fully digest this and read the docs.... Wow. This is awesome. Very well considered. I have passed it on to the rest of my team, but it looks very well thought out. It will be interesting to see the trade-off of compression gains versus performance analyzed in detail. Will the ideal tradeoff be different for mobile devices? They have both (often) lower bandwidth and usually less powerful CPUs, upping the stakes for finding the sweet spot in that tradeoff. T -- “Why shouldn't truth be stranger than fiction? Fiction, after all, has to make sense.” —Mark Twain
Received on Friday, 30 March 2012 21:27:51 UTC