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Software
Browsers
Chrome & Chromium
Blurry image rendering in Chromium browsers
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<blockquote data-quote="SeriousHoax" data-source="post: 928310" data-attributes="member: 78686"><p>Adding one more demonstration of the blurry image issue. This one is shared to me by [USER=89360]@McMcbrad[/USER]. You can clearly see what's wrong with Chromium.</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]253688[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>Till Chrome fix this, as a <span style="color: rgb(250, 197, 28)">temporary solution</span> you may make images appear similar to Firefox by setting "<span style="color: rgb(65, 168, 95)">GPU rasterization</span>" in flags to "<span style="color: rgb(226, 80, 65)">Disabled</span>".</p><p>[ATTACH]253689[/ATTACH]</p><p>This fixes the problem almost everywhere. I would say 90% at least. I'm saying 90% because I noticed even with this trick/even with hardware acceleration disabled there are some images which still appears blurry on Chromium browsers. So, Firefox is still superior for the best image viewing experience but like I said, to me based on my short experience, almost all blurry image problems get solved with this flag.</p><p>Now I am not knowledgeable enough to understand "rastertization" fully but on browsers at least it is something to do with image rendering mainly. So, all/part of the image rendering will be done by your CPU now instead of GPU. Since the main issue lies in the hardware acceleration of Chromium, this explains why disabling this flag fixes the issue.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SeriousHoax, post: 928310, member: 78686"] Adding one more demonstration of the blurry image issue. This one is shared to me by [USER=89360]@McMcbrad[/USER]. You can clearly see what's wrong with Chromium. [ATTACH type="full" alt="z.PNG"]253688[/ATTACH] Till Chrome fix this, as a [COLOR=rgb(250, 197, 28)]temporary solution[/COLOR] you may make images appear similar to Firefox by setting "[COLOR=rgb(65, 168, 95)]GPU rasterization[/COLOR]" in flags to "[COLOR=rgb(226, 80, 65)]Disabled[/COLOR]". [ATTACH]253689[/ATTACH] This fixes the problem almost everywhere. I would say 90% at least. I'm saying 90% because I noticed even with this trick/even with hardware acceleration disabled there are some images which still appears blurry on Chromium browsers. So, Firefox is still superior for the best image viewing experience but like I said, to me based on my short experience, almost all blurry image problems get solved with this flag. Now I am not knowledgeable enough to understand "rastertization" fully but on browsers at least it is something to do with image rendering mainly. So, all/part of the image rendering will be done by your CPU now instead of GPU. Since the main issue lies in the hardware acceleration of Chromium, this explains why disabling this flag fixes the issue. [/QUOTE]
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