pngquant is a simple tool with one purpose: convert 32-bit RGBA PNGs into 8-bit RGBA-palette PNGs (or fewer than 8 bits, if you want), via quantization and either ordered or diffusion (Floyd-Steinberg) dithering. The fact that you can also use it on RGB or even palette images (e.g., to further color- reduce them to 16 colors or whatever) is just a nice little bonus. The current version is fully functional in the sense that it can do: - nice reduction of all PNG image types to 256-color (or smaller) palette - automatic optimization of tRNS chunks - batch conversion of multiple files (e.g., "pngquant 256 *.png") - Unix-style command-line filtering (e.g., "... | pngquant 16 | ...") ...on at least Unix and Win32. It should be pretty easy to port to almost any other platform with a command-line interface and unstructured (stream- oriented) files, including VMS but probably not VM or MVS. It does still lack a few features: - no ancillary chunk preservation (except gAMA) - no preservation of significant-bits info after rescaling (sBIT chunk) - no mapfile support - no "native" handling of 16-bit-per-sample files or gray+alpha files (i.e., all samples are truncated to 8 bits and all images are promoted to RGBA before quantization) These issues will be addressed in a post-1.0 release. By the way, be sure to check "before" and "after" file sizes, preferably with pngcrush (http://pmt.sourceforge.net/pngcrush/); dithered palette images may be four times smaller to begin with, but they don't compress nearly as well as grayscale and truecolor images. Some images, such as Henri Sivonen's alpha button (http://www.pp.htv.fi/hsivone1/css-test/bitmapstyle.html), can be made smaller as full 32-bit RGBA images (4076 bytes in this case) than as either FS-dithered palette (4550 bytes) or ordered-dither palette (4482 bytes) images. WWW: http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/apps/pngquant.html Greg Roelofs newt@pobox.com