Kakadu (software)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Original author(s)David Taubman
Initial releaseAt least 2002
Stable release
8.4.1 / November 20, 2023; 15 months ago (2023-11-20)[1]
Written inC++
Original author(s)David Taubman
Initial releaseAt least 2002
Stable release
8.4.1 / November 20, 2023; 15 months ago (2023-11-20)[1]
Written inC++
Operating systemUnix/Windows/macOS and others
PlatformIA-32, x86-64, PowerPC, ARM architecture, SPARC
TypeGraphic software
LicenseProprietary
Websitekakadusoftware.com

Kakadu is a closed-source library to encode and decode JPEG 2000 images. It implements the ISO/IEC 15444-1 standard fully in part 1, and partly in parts 2–3. Kakadu is a trademark of NewSouth Innovations Ltd.

Kakadu was developed by and continues to be maintained by David Taubman from University of New South Wales (UNSW), Australia. He is also an author of EBCOT, one of the algorithms used in JPEG 2000.[2]

The software library is named after Kakadu National Park.

It is used by several applications, such as for example Apple Inc. QuickTime. It is also used in Google Earth and the online implementation thereof as well as Internet Archive.[3][4][5]

Kakadu library is heavily optimized and is a fully compliant implementation. Also, it has built-in multi-threading.[2] In a 2007 study Kakadu outperformed the JasPer library in terms of speed.[6] A more thorough comparison done in 2005, however, has shown that Kakadu does not achieve the best performance, in terms of compression quality.[7]

References

Further reading

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI