The problem with animated images and uploading them to Lemmy is that pict-rs will typically convert them. Each instance can and often does have its pict-rs service configured differently. Some will just convert them to static images, some will convert to GIF, etc. If you upload to catbox, that shouldn’t be an issue. Unfortunately, I haven’t messed with animated webp much.
So you’ll probably want to check with your instance admins (or run some posts somewhere) to see what works best.
I uploaded this one to Lemmy (instead of my usual use of Catbox), and have no complaints with its integrity after uploading. It looks just as good/bad here as the raw file did before uploading, and has basically the same file size.
The MP4 I exported was only 200 KB with much higher resolution/quality. I had to compress the WEBP immensely to get it down to 260 KB, just because I wanted it to loop automatically.
I am wondering if there might be a better way to export/convert the file before uploading, or if WEBP is just not as magical in its compressibility as I had thought.
The problem with animated images and uploading them to Lemmy is that pict-rs will typically convert them. Each instance can and often does have its pict-rs service configured differently. Some will just convert them to static images, some will convert to GIF, etc. If you upload to catbox, that shouldn’t be an issue. Unfortunately, I haven’t messed with animated webp much.
So you’ll probably want to check with your instance admins (or run some posts somewhere) to see what works best.
I uploaded this one to Lemmy (instead of my usual use of Catbox), and have no complaints with its integrity after uploading. It looks just as good/bad here as the raw file did before uploading, and has basically the same file size.
The MP4 I exported was only 200 KB with much higher resolution/quality. I had to compress the WEBP immensely to get it down to 260 KB, just because I wanted it to loop automatically.
I am wondering if there might be a better way to export/convert the file before uploading, or if WEBP is just not as magical in its compressibility as I had thought.
Maybe try JPEG-XL?