• Resolved Sopratutto

    (@sopratutto)


    Sometime within the last week our PageSpeed score dropped from a 95/100 to a 42/100 and its all from .jpgs that it says need compressed. Is your Lossless Compression setting no longer up to par with Google’s standard?

    My optipng optimization level is set to Level 2, which is the default. Should I increase that? Also, my JPG quality level is set to the default 82.

    I don’t understand because these settings worked fine before.

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
  • Plugin Author nosilver4u

    (@nosilver4u)

    This is the third such report I’ve seen, so I think Google just switched the image compression method in their Pagespeed tests from lossless to lossy. The only way to get lossy compression, without manually downloading all your images, is to use the API. I haven’t been able to confirm this anywhere online, but I even saw the same thing on one of my own sites today, so that is my suspicion.

    This is a pretty huge deal if it is true. Either that, or they found some magical voodoo that can cut an image by 70% without losing a single pixel. Even their WebP format doesn’t do that in lossy mode, so I’m pretty sure they’ve changed the image tests to lossy.

    Plugin Author nosilver4u

    (@nosilver4u)

    Just thought of a way to confirm my suspicions (in the absence of any formal announcement from Google):
    1. run test on site
    2. download the image zip file from the pagespeed test
    3. compare the pagespeed image with the original image via DSSIM

    The result in lossless mode would be a big huge zero, but it wasn’t. On my sample image, I got a .0009, which is pretty minimal, but still definitely lossy.

    This is the third such report I’ve seen, so I think Google just switched the image compression method in their Pagespeed tests from lossless to lossy.

    True. This has been a common query in the official PageSpeed Insights forum at https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/pagespeed-insights-discuss .

    Hi @nosilver4u,
    can you confirm that using the purchased version of your tool resolves the issues with pagespeed insight?

    Best regards,
    Daniel

    Plugin Author nosilver4u

    (@nosilver4u)

    Using the Max Lossy settings will generally get you similar savings to what the new Pagespeed recommendations will tell you.

    However, I wrote a post over in the Pagespeed forums explaining the flaw in trying to get a perfect score, as it relates to image optimization, and I’ll try to give a shorter version here.

    Basically, Google’s tool is attempting to determine what quality level your images were saved at, and comparing it with what they believe to be the optimal quality level. The problem with that method is that it generally only succeeds when the tool doing the detection is the same as the tool used in compression. Thus, if you use EWWW on your images, and Google is using jpegoptim, they will never get an accurate reading, and they might recommend further savings because the image quality is still so high. Other users have seen the same behavior with Photoshop, saving at quality 60 gives them better quality than the Pagespeed image, and higher savings, but Pagespeed then tells them they didn’t do enough compression, even though they already beat the original recommendation.

    On the flip side, several folks have reported great success with TinyJPG in the Pagespeed forums, and since that is what EWWW uses at max lossy, it should generally satisfy the Pagespeed metrics.

    So, can I guarantee that Pagespeed will stop complaining about your images? No, but that isn’t the point of Pagespeed. The point is to make your images smaller, and your pages load faster, and I know EWWW’s max lossy setting will nail that.

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)
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