[MCN-L] compressing TIFFs for museum collection images

1970-01-08 Thread Friscia, Jeanne
We at SFMOMA are on the heels of ingesting our permanent collection high
resolution TIF files into our DAMS system and faced with the issue of
whether or not to use compressed tiffs. While we know that they
represent a lossless standard, we wonder if anyone has thoughts on
issues that may arise concerning corruption, preservation, etc. In other
words, is this really a good idea and are there cons to the pros of
saving storage space? 

Thanks,

Jeanne Friscia

 

Jeanne Friscia

Visual Resources Specialist 

Collections Information Access Department

SFMOMA

(415) 357-4103

 


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[MCN-L] compressing TIFFs for museum collection images

1970-01-08 Thread Jeffrey Evans
No - don't compress. Write DVDs if you have to.  Or buy more space.
Another issue will be reading a compressed Tiff - you may hit some potholes
software-wise. Also as your systems and software packages upgrade, its one
more headache to worry about.

JEFF
 
Jeffrey Evans
Digital Imaging Specialist
Princeton University  Art Museum
(609) 258-8579






On 1/31/07 4:08 PM, Friscia, Jeanne jfriscia at SFMOMA.org wrote:

 We at SFMOMA are on the heels of ingesting our permanent collection high
 resolution TIF files into our DAMS system and faced with the issue of
 whether or not to use compressed tiffs. While we know that they
 represent a lossless standard, we wonder if anyone has thoughts on
 issues that may arise concerning corruption, preservation, etc. In other
 words, is this really a good idea and are there cons to the pros of
 saving storage space?
 
 Thanks,
 
 Jeanne Friscia
 
  
 
 Jeanne Friscia
 
 Visual Resources Specialist
 
 Collections Information Access Department
 
 SFMOMA
 
 (415) 357-4103
 
  
 
 
 The information contained in this electronic mail message (including any
 attachments) is confidential information that may be covered by the Electronic
 Communications Privacy Act, 18 USC Sections 2510-2521, intended only for the
 use of the individual or entity named above, and may be privileged.  If the
 reader of this message is not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified
 that any dissemination, distribution, or copying of this communication, or the
 taking of any action based on it, is strictly prohibited.  If you have
 received this communication in error, please immediately notify me and delete
 the original message.  Thank you
 
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[MCN-L] compressing TIFFs for museum collection images

1970-01-08 Thread John ffrench
I would agree with Jeff.  Don't compress but rather plan for more  
space and/or make a subset of compressed images.
We store all of our files to server uncompressed.

*
John ffrench
Associate Director
Visual Resources Department
Yale University Art Gallery
tel. 203.432.8051
fax. 203.432.9369

john.ffrench at yale.edu
http://artgallery.yale.edu



On Jan 31, 2007, at 4:12 PM, Jeffrey Evans wrote:

 No - don't compress. Write DVDs if you have to.  Or buy more space.
 Another issue will be reading a compressed Tiff - you may hit some  
 potholes
 software-wise. Also as your systems and software packages upgrade,  
 its one
 more headache to worry about.

 JEFF

 Jeffrey Evans
 Digital Imaging Specialist
 Princeton University  Art Museum
 (609) 258-8579






 On 1/31/07 4:08 PM, Friscia, Jeanne jfriscia at SFMOMA.org wrote:

 We at SFMOMA are on the heels of ingesting our permanent  
 collection high
 resolution TIF files into our DAMS system and faced with the issue of
 whether or not to use compressed tiffs. While we know that they
 represent a lossless standard, we wonder if anyone has thoughts on
 issues that may arise concerning corruption, preservation, etc. In  
 other
 words, is this really a good idea and are there cons to the pros of
 saving storage space?

 Thanks,

 Jeanne Friscia



 Jeanne Friscia

 Visual Resources Specialist

 Collections Information Access Department

 SFMOMA

 (415) 357-4103




 The information contained in this electronic mail message  
 (including any
 attachments) is confidential information that may be covered by  
 the Electronic
 Communications Privacy Act, 18 USC Sections 2510-2521, intended  
 only for the
 use of the individual or entity named above, and may be  
 privileged.  If the
 reader of this message is not the intended recipient, you are  
 hereby notified
 that any dissemination, distribution, or copying of this  
 communication, or the
 taking of any action based on it, is strictly prohibited.  If you  
 have
 received this communication in error, please immediately notify me  
 and delete
 the original message.  Thank you

 ___
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 Computer
 Network (http://www.mcn.edu)

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[MCN-L] compressing TIFFs for museum collection images

1970-01-08 Thread Han, Yan
For TIFF in B/W, you can use CCITT group4 to do lossless compression.
The alg is very simple and I believe it is part of TIFF 6 standard.

For TIFF in grayscale and color, the common approach is not to compress,
but you can try to compress them in LZW, a well-known compression alg
(see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LZW). However, I believe that you have
to monitor the file format very closely.

Yan Han
University of Arizona libraries
 

-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Howard Brainen
Sent: Wednesday, January 31, 2007 2:24 PM
To: 'Museum Computer Network Listserv'
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] compressing TIFFs for museum collection images

There is a real question about whether or not you'll be able to read
those
compressed TIFF's off in the future.   That's why the best practice is
to
store them uncompressed.  Storage is 1/2 the price it was 18 months ago
and that trend will continue into the future.

Howard Brainen
Digital Imaging Consultant
TWO CAT DIGITAL INC.
14719 Catalina Street
San Leandro, CA  94577  USA
510-940-2670 x201
www.twocatdigital.com/consulting.html
blog: www.digitalenabler.blogspot.com


 -Original Message-
 From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu] On Behalf 
 Of Friscia, Jeanne
 Sent: Wednesday, January 31, 2007 1:08 PM
 To: Museum Computer Network Listserv
 Subject: [MCN-L] compressing TIFFs for museum collection images
 
 We at SFMOMA are on the heels of ingesting our permanent collection 
 high resolution TIF files into our DAMS system and faced with the 
 issue of whether or not to use compressed tiffs. While we know that 
 they represent a lossless standard, we wonder if anyone has thoughts 
 on issues that may arise concerning corruption, preservation, etc. In 
 other words, is this really a good idea and are there cons to the pros

 of saving storage space?
 
 Thanks,
 
 Jeanne Friscia
 
  
 
 Jeanne Friscia
 
 Visual Resources Specialist
 
 Collections Information Access Department
 
 SFMOMA
 
 (415) 357-4103
 
  
 
 
 The information contained in this electronic mail message (including 
 any attachments) is confidential information that may be covered by 
 the Electronic Communications Privacy Act,
 18 USC Sections 2510-2521, intended only for the use of the individual

 or entity named above, and may be privileged.  If the reader of this 
 message is not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that 
 any dissemination, distribution, or copying of this communication, or 
 the taking of any action based on it, is strictly prohibited.  If you 
 have received this communication in error, please immediately notify 
 me and delete the original message.  Thank you
 
 ___
 You are currently subscribed to mcn-l, the listserv of the Museum 
 Computer Network (http://www.mcn.edu)
 
 To post to this list, send messages to: mcn-l at mcn.edu
 
 To unsubscribe or change mcn-l delivery options visit:
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