Media Release - Ref 1999/301 - Dec 14 , 1999
 The CSIRO SVG Viewer displays SVG graphics and allows users to zoom into various features of the graphic.  When SVG graphics are enlarged the details of the  image are revealed (boxes), unlike current web images which become blurred when enlarged. (Note: the image displayed here is in JPEG format, not SVG, and enlarging this image will result in the usual blurring.)
CSIRO brings great graphics to the web

CSIRO has now made it possible to see a new standard of high quality graphics over the Internet.

CSIRO scientists have developed an Internet based viewer for a new form of graphic, called Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG). SVGs give better results than the more familiar graphics such as JPEG or GIF in that they remain clear no matter how much you zoom in to the image.

"Vector graphics are structured differently to other images," says Mr Dean Jackson, a software engineer at CSIRO.

"So they do not suffer from the problems encountered with the bit-mapped images currently used on the web. Bit-mapped images, like JPEG, look good at their original size, but when printed, viewed on different screens or when enlarged, the lines become jagged and the image blurs."

"With vector graphics, no matter how much you zoom in, the image is always clear, and, in many cases, vector images are quicker to download."

CSIRO's SVG viewer also takes advantage of the potential for SVG graphics to be interactive - users can zoom in or pan around the graphics, and the graphics can respond to mouse-clicks and user interaction.

Earlierthis year the international body, the World Wide Web Consortium, released the first draft of the Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) format. Since then, viewers for the new format have been developed as stand-alone applications.

The CSIRO SVG Viewer is the first to allow the graphics to be displayed directly in an Internet browser.

The next step would be for the Viewer to be incorporated into existing web browsers so that all web users could enjoy the graphics. Already, the Viewer has received attention from major software companies around the world.

"The CSIRO SVG viewer runs within web browsers, so it will allow anyone with Internet access to experience these great graphics," Mr Jackson says.

"We want to make vector graphics accessible to more people because they are very useful," says Mr Jackson, "especially for quickly and easily viewing detailed map-based information."

"For example, using the Viewer, electricity workers could easily access maps showing electricity networks and zoom in to see details clearly, making maintaining power supplies easier and safer," he says. "Or, high quality maps of urban streets and property boundaries could be delivered to planners, property developers and residents, via the Internet and be viewed with their web browser."

"Maps are actually created as vector graphics, so it makes sense to keep them in this format, which users can manipulate and add extra information to, rather than converting them to the bit-mapped images currently used on the Internet," says Mr Jackson.

Other benefits of making SVG graphics accessible via the web include better web access for people with visual impairments. SVG graphics can be greatly enlarged without becoming blurred and, unlike current web images, any text contained in SVG graphics can be recognised as text by browsers and read by screen-readers used by the visually impaired.

The CSIRO SVG Viewer software is available free from the CSIRO web site, along with its Java source code. This means that other software developers can see how the software works. They can change and improve it or freely incorporate it into their own software.

Such "open source" projects are a growing trend in web software development.

"This is one of the first open-source projects we have run," says Mr Jackson. "It has been a really positive experience. We have had some great feedback – people have come back to us with ideas for using the software which we had never thought of."

More information:

Mr Dean Jackson (02) 6216 7045
E-mail: Dean.Jackson@cmis.csiro.au
http://www.cmis.csiro.au/sis/svgviewr.htm

or,

Ms Janelle Kennard (02) 6216 7157
E-mail: Janelle.Kennard@cmis.csiro.au

To find out more about the SVG graphics themselves and the World Wide Web Consortium, see:

http://www.w3.org/Press/1999/SVG-WD
Photo and Footage opportunity:

The CSIRO SVG Viewer is available for demonstration. Call Mr Jackson to arrange to see (and interact with) it.

To display a larger version of this image clickhere.

 
Contacts
Ms Rosie Schmedding 
  CSIRO Media
  PO Box 225
Dickson ACT 2602
Phone: +61 2 6276 6520
Fax: +61 2 6276 6821
Mobile: +61 418 622 653
Email: Rosie.Schmedding@csiro.au
   
Mr Dean Jackson 
  CSIRO Mathematical and Information Sciences
GPO Box 664
Canberra ACT 2601
Phone: +61 2 6216 7045
Fax: +61 2 6216 7111
Email: Dean.Jackson@csiro.au
   
Ms Janelle Kennard 
  Communicator
  CSIRO Mathematical and Information Sciences
GPO Box 664
Canberra ACT 2601
Phone: +61 2 6216 7157
Fax: +61 2 6216 7111
Email: Janelle.Kennard@csiro.au