2. In the image window, click the Optimized or 2-Up
tab. Note the optimized image quality and size for the current optimization
settings.
3. In the Optimize palette, select JPEG from
the format menu (movie). Some new options and menus
appear on the palette. Note in the image window how the image quality
and file size have changed.
The most important thing about JPEG settings is Quality
(compression rate); the stronger the compression, the worse image
looks.
4. In the Quality menu, select one of the four standard
compression rates (Low, Medium, High, Maximum)
to set the compression rate roughly.
5. To adjust the compression precisely (recommended),
move the Amount slider to obtain the smallest file size
without significant loss of quality. In most cases, 60% compression
is quite sufficient.
6. There are some more options to know. Click the Optimized
checkbox. It's supposed to create smaller but less compatible files.
In the movie, this option reduces the output file size by 1
Kb, that is about a half second for a dial-up surfer.
7. Click the Progressive checkbox. Progressive JPEG's
are loaded in a browser in a few passes, so that the users can view
the image (though with poor quality) even before it is fully downloaded.
The file size is diminished by another kilobyte.
8. Try the Blur slider*.
It diminishes file size pleasantly, but what happens to the image!
Blurring probably makes sense for background images, but we don't
need it at this time.
9. With the Matte selector*
you can simulate transparency for a JPEG optimized image as follows:
click on Matte selector, choose a swatch matching the background
color of the target web page, and ImageReady fills the transparent
pixels of the optimized image with the selected color. Unfortunately,
we have no transparent areas on this image, so we needn't and can't
use this option.
*If you can't find
some of the mentioned options and controls, open the palette's menu
and select Show Options (screenshot) or expand the palette
section with the
gadget.
Note that you are not
obliged to use all of these options. As a rule,
you need only the Quality slider and (but occasionally) Progressive,
and Optimized options.