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MrSID Image Format (Multi-resolution Seamless Image Database), Generation 2

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Table of Contents
Identification and description
Local use
Sustainability factors
Quality and functionality factors
File type signifiers
Notes
Format specifications
Useful references
Format Description Properties
• ID: fdd000031
• Short name: MrSID_MG2
• Content categories: still image
• Format category: file format, bitstream encoding
• Last significant update: 2005-03-21
• Draft status: Partial

Identification and description Explanation of format description terms

Full nameMrSID Image Format (Multi-resolution Seamless Image Database), Generation 2
Description MrSID is a patented, wavelet-based file format designed to enable portability of massive bit-mapped (raster) images. The format employs discrete wavelet transformations (DWT) in a seamless fashion on tile subsets of the image data and stores the wavelet coefficients in a data structure that supports efficient retrieval of the data needed to generate a specified rectangular zone of the image at a chosen spatial resolution. The data structure of a MrSID image is a set of bitplanes designed to support 'transactions' of image data by extracting and delivering exactly and only those bitplanes necessary to construct a view according to desired scene, scale, or image quality, independent of bandwidth constraints. The format was designed to enable instantaneous viewing and manipulation of imagery both locally and over networks without sacrificing quality.
Production phaseMost often a middle-state or final-state format.
Relationship to other formats 
  Has later versionMrSID_MG3, MrSID Image Format (Multi-resolution Seamless Image Database), Generation 3

Local use Explanation of format description terms

LC experience or existing holdingsLC has used MrSID_MG2 as a service format for large digitized images (primarily maps) since 1996 to facilitate zooming for close study of detail over the web. The web-delivered image in the "zoom" view is a GIF derived on the fly from the MrSID file. JPEG 2000 (Part 1, lossy), J2K_C_LSY, is now used in place of MrSID, and substitution of JPEG 2000 for MrSID images produced earlier is planned (as of early 2005). Uncompressed TIFFs retained as masters for the MrSID images will be compressed to create the JPEG 2000 images.
LC preferenceNeither preferred nor acceptable as a master format.

Sustainability factors Explanation of format description terms

Disclosure Proprietary format. Owned by LizardTech, subsidiary of Celartem Technology Inc. (HERCULES:4330), a Japan-based technology company focused on storage and distribution technologies for digital images.
  Documentation No public specification. Documentation for the GeoExpress software development toolkit includes information about compression options, metadata support, and some information about the file format. U.S. Patent 5,710,835 provides information about the compression methodology.
Adoption Adoption has been quite extensive for certainly categories of image (e.g. maps, aerial photography), particularly in the cartographic community. Libraries and other archival institutions have used it as a service format, but usually considered uncompressed TIFFs as the master or archival form. As tools for JPEG 2000 (Part 1, lossy) became available in 2004, use of that format (also based on wavelet compression) began to replace MrSID in some contexts.
  Licensing and patent claims Proprietary wavelet compression is exploited by LizardTech. U.S. Patent 5,710,835 was granted to Jonathan Bradley, et al. in January 1998 for an invention related to storage and retrieval of data contained in very large digital images. Quoting from the patent application, "This invention was made with government support under Contract No. W-7405-ENG-36 awarded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The government has certain rights in the invention." Very few products can be used for compression/encoding beyond LizardTech's own. LizardTech's own encoding product is priced based on annual compression volume.
Transparency The format for image data is proprietary. Use requires sophisticated decompression tools, available only in compiled form through a licensed SDK (software developers toolkit). Equivalent tools could only be built with full access to the proprietary specifications.
Self-documentation TBD.
External dependenciesNone
Technical protection considerationsNone

Quality and functionality factors (still image)

Normal rendering for still imagesGood support.
Clarity (support for high image resolution) Excellent support for images with very high spatial resolution. An FAQ page dated 2001 stated, in relation to tonal resolution, "Currently, MrSID Geo works only with grayscale and RGB imagery (8- and 24-bit images). Multi-spectral data will be supported in the near future."
Color maintenance TBD
Support for graphic effects and typographyNo support for vector graphics.
Functionality beyond normal image rendering Since MrSID is widely used for geospatial images, it incorporates metadata to support geo-rectification, etc. in GIS systems.

File type signifiers Explanation of format description terms

Tag typeValueNote
Filename Extension sid  
Internet Media Typeimage/x-mrsid-image 
Magic number ASCII: msid Observed as first 4 characters of MrSID files created at LC.

Notes Explanation of format description terms

General 
HistoryLizardTech was founded in 1992 to build valuable business solutions from technologies created by the world's leading research organizations including Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) and AT&T Labs. The compression technology in the MrSID format was developed at LANL. LizardTech licensed Generation I of its patented MrSID software from Los Alamos National Laboratory. MrSID was developed by the same team that created the standard for storage and transfer of the FBI's large fingerprint image library. In early 2005, the LizardTech product line that incorporates MrSID encoding used the name GeoExpress; ExpressServer supports image delivery.

Format specifications Explanation of format description terms

URLs

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Useful references

URLs
http://www.lizardtech.com/products/geo/
http://www.eomonline.com/Common/Archives/1998mar/98mar_deal.html. Deal, John Grizz. "Massive Raster Imagery: A new standard for compressing and displaying files is born. Earth Observation Magazine, March 1998.
MrSID Technology Primer [http://www.lizardtech.com/files/geo/techinfo/MrSID_Tech_Primer.pdf]
LizardTech Developer Site. Provides access to SDK toolkit documentation. As of early 2005, documentation download requires registration, but no other commitment is needed. [http://developer.lizardtech.com/]

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Last Updated: 03/ 7/2007