(6 October 2017) The first phase of improvements to OpenJPEG, an open source JPEG 2000 codec, has drawn to a close, resulting in the latest release of OpenJPEG version 2.3.0. This new release finalizes the work made by Even Rouault and funded by several academic institutions and archival organizations to make OpenJPEG significantly faster and safer. In addition to what has been done in version 2.2.0 (multithreading at decoding, speed optimizations, memory consumption reduction, etc.), this release adds improvement to sub-tile decoding. Additional notes on the latest release can be found at http://www.openjpeg.org/2017/10/04/OpenJPEG-2.3.0-released.
With the goal of pursuing additional phases of OpenJPEG improvements, the IIIF community is seeking feedback on the latest release as well as information about JP2 workflows. Institutions working with JP2s and/or OpenJPEG are encouraged to download and try the new release, and provide feedback by answering as many questions as possible in the feedback survey:
The project team welcomes additional funding institutions to contribute to future phases and sustain the effort to bring OpenJPEG up to speed with proprietary implementations of the JPEG 2000 standard. To learn more and get involved, please contact Sheila Rabun, IIIF Community and Communications Officer, at [email protected], and Glen Robson, IIIF Technical Coordinator, at [email protected].
The OpenJPEG improvement project has been made possible with funding from the Wellcome Library, Stanford University, the Nationale Bibliotheek van Nederland (KBNL), and the University of Michigan, in partnership with the International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF) Consortium, the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR), intoPIX, and the Image and Signal Processing Group (ISPGroup) from University of Louvain (UCL, Belgium) hosting the OpenJPEG project. Many thanks also to developer Even Rouault, and to all contributors.
The announcement is here.