US20140281926A1 - Automatic display of resized images - Google Patents

Automatic display of resized images Download PDF

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Publication number
US20140281926A1
US20140281926A1 US14/161,684 US201414161684A US2014281926A1 US 20140281926 A1 US20140281926 A1 US 20140281926A1 US 201414161684 A US201414161684 A US 201414161684A US 2014281926 A1 US2014281926 A1 US 2014281926A1
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image
document
component
client
browser
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US14/161,684
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Shawn Brenneman
Michael Herf
Robert Bailey
Aaron Hopkins
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Google LLC
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Google LLC
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    • G06F17/211
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F17/00Digital computing or data processing equipment or methods, specially adapted for specific functions
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F40/00Handling natural language data
    • G06F40/10Text processing
    • G06F40/103Formatting, i.e. changing of presentation of documents
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F16/00Information retrieval; Database structures therefor; File system structures therefor
    • G06F16/90Details of database functions independent of the retrieved data types
    • G06F16/95Retrieval from the web
    • G06F16/957Browsing optimisation, e.g. caching or content distillation
    • G06F16/9577Optimising the visualization of content, e.g. distillation of HTML documents

Definitions

  • the present invention relates generally to scaling and/or resizing of images for display over a network. More specifically, systems and methods for automatic display of scaled and/or resized images that fit within pre-defined areas in a web browser are disclosed.
  • Web browsers are frequently used to display images stored on backend servers and transmitted over the Internet or other network.
  • web browsers generally display fixed-sized images.
  • display of fixed-sized images is often undesirable.
  • images may appear small and may not take full advantage of the available space in the web browser window.
  • large images may not fit within the viewable space of the browser window, requiring the end user to scroll in order to view the entire image.
  • the method, on a client side, for automatic display of resized images across a network generally include requesting a document, e.g., an HTML document, having a reference to an image from a server, displaying the document in a client document browser, e.g., a web page browser, displaying the image in the client document browser, automatically requesting a rescaled or resized image from the server upon resizing of the client document browser, receiving and displaying the rescaled or resized image received from the server in the client document browser.
  • a document e.g., an HTML document
  • client document browser e.g., a web page browser
  • the method for automatic display of a resized image in a document across a network generally includes providing the document containing instructions for a client document browser to display the image within a component in the document, to rescale the component upon resizing of the client document browser, and to request a rescaled version of the image upon resizing of the client document browser, serving the document in response to a request for the document from the client document browser, and serving the image of a size specified by the client document browser to the client document browser.
  • the system for automatic display of a resized image in a document across a network may be implemented as a computer program product for use in conjunction with a computer system, the computer program product comprising a computer readable storage medium on which are stored instructions executable on a computer processor.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates an exemplary system architecture and process for automatically displaying resized or rescaled images that fit within pre-defined areas in a web browser.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates an exemplary browser window displaying a webpage containing an image.
  • FIG. 3 illustrates an exemplary resizing of the browser window displaying the webpage of FIG. 2 , the image being proportionately resized.
  • FIG. 4 is a flowchart of an exemplary client-side process for automatically displaying a resized image in a webpage upon resizing of a browser window.
  • FIG. 5 is a flowchart of an exemplary server-side process to enable a client-side browser to automatically display a resized image in a webpage upon resizing of a browser window.
  • the systems and methods described herein may be used in various applications for efficient rendering of a web page in a web browser.
  • the systems and methods described herein generally works with standard web browsers such as Internet Explorer, Netscape Navigator, and Mozilla Firefox, without requiring special software be installed on the client side.
  • the rescaling and/or resizing of images as described herein generally does not require special software to be installed on the client side and generally utilizes JavaScript.
  • JavaScript is presented herein as illustrative methods for resizing images in browser windows, any other suitable methods may be similarly employed.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates an exemplary system architecture and process 10 for automatically displaying rescaled images in a web browser.
  • the system enables a browser to deliver resized images to an end user, based on the user's viewing environment.
  • a browser window 14 is open on a client device 12 , such as a personal computer.
  • the browser 14 may be, for example, a web browser, that communications with a server 18 via a network 16 such as the Internet.
  • the server 18 typically stores a webpage 20 , typically in HTML, one or more original image(s) 22 referenced by the webpage 20 , an image scaling JavaScript component 24 , and an image scaler 28 that can scale the original images 22 to specified sizes.
  • the server 18 may store data on one or across multiple servers, e.g., computers.
  • the server 18 is described herein as generally serving one webpage that contains one image although the server 18 may serve numerous webpages each containing one or multiple images.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates an exemplary browser window 30 displaying a webpage 32 containing an image 34 .
  • the image 34 generally occupies the width of the browser window 30 .
  • the systems and methods described herein automatically displays a resized or rescaled image within the browser window.
  • the resized browser window 36 displaying the webpage 32 is wider than that shown in FIG. 2 .
  • the image 38 displayed is proportionately resized within the resized browser window 36 .
  • the image 38 is resized to similarly occupy the width of the resized browser window 36 .
  • the above-described example illustrates an automatic resizing or rescaling that enlarges the image
  • the automatic resizing or rescaling of the image can be similarly applied to decrease the size of the image.
  • the image may be displayed using a JavaScript component.
  • the JavaScript component can be embedded in a typical webpage and sized according to a fixed or relative size.
  • a fixed size may be specified in terms of a fixed number of pixels.
  • a relative size may be specified relative to the size of the browser window, e.g., image width equal to 1 ⁇ 2 the width of the browser window.
  • the JavaScript component determines the size of the image to be displayed, the JavaScript component makes a request to the backend server for an image scaled to fit within the available area of the component.
  • the server may scale the image as requested using any suitable image scaling method.
  • the browser window displays the scaled image in the JavaScript image component. Because the JavaScript component specifies the exact size to the backend server, the scaled image should fit within the available area of the JavaScript component.
  • FIG. 4 is a flowchart of an exemplary client-side process 50 for automatically displaying a resized image in a webpage upon resizing of a browser window.
  • a JavaScript component may be used to display images within a webpage.
  • a user may request a web page using a browser via, e.g., the Internet or an intranet, where the web page contains at least one request for an image.
  • the browser receives and loads the web page, e.g., the HTML source code, from the server.
  • the browser may also create the JavaScript component within the webpage at block 54 .
  • blocks 58 , 60 , 62 , and 64 may be performed.
  • the JavaScript inside the component determines the size of the component and thus the size of the image to be requested from the backend server.
  • the JavaScript awaits for and traps JavaScript resize events fired or sent by the browser.
  • the size of the component may generally be known. However, depending on the layout of the page, the size of the image component may not be known prior to the image component being created within the webpage.
  • the size of the image may be detecting based on a DIV (or browser window size or similar element in the browser).
  • the size may be transmitted to the server asynchronously.
  • the request may instead include the display resolution.
  • the display resolution may be determined from the browser identification string.
  • the browser transmits a width and height to the server and the server, in response, serves the appropriately sized image.
  • the JavaScript within the component transmits a request to the backend server for an image of the size that fits within the component, e.g., as determined in block 58 .
  • the JavaScript transmits a request to the backend server for an image that fits within the area of the component.
  • the JavaScript may transmit a request for a newly resized image from the backend server based on the new size of the component.
  • the webpage may optionally request the browser to resize and redisplay the image within the component upon browser resizing.
  • the browser may temporarily display a rescaled image by rescaling the existing (already received on the end user/client side) image to fit within the new component size to give the end user a more immediate response.
  • this resizing is performed by the web browser, the quality of the rescaled image is typically lower than that provided by the server.
  • the image from the server replaces the temporary image at block 64 . It is noted that although block 62 is shown to be performed after block 60 in the illustrative flowchart of FIG. 4 , block 62 may be performed prior to block 60 is performed.
  • the browser when the browser receives the requested image from the backend server, the browser replaces the temporary image displayed at block 62 with the rescaled image received from the server. Because the resized image is scaled to fit within the area of the component, it would generally occupy the entire area. It is noted that if the backend server fails to respond to the request made by the JavaScript at block 62 , the webpage may continue to display the temporary image rescaled by the browser at block 62 . Each time the browser window is resized at block 66 , the process 50 returns to perform blocks 58 , 60 , 62 , and 64 .
  • FIG. 5 is a flowchart of an exemplary server-side process 80 to enable a client-side browser to automatically display a resized image in a webpage upon resizing a browser window.
  • the server provides a webpage, typically in HTML, that contains at least one image.
  • the server serves the webpage in response to a browser request for the webpage. For each request for the image, e.g., initially or upon resizing of the browser, at block 86 , blocks 88 and 90 are performed.
  • the server receives a request for the image of a specified size from client browser.
  • the server scales the image contained in the webpage according to the size requested by the client browser.
  • the server may compute the scaled image on the fly or may retrieve the image from a set of precomputed sizes.
  • the server responds to the request by transmitting the scaled image to the client browser.
  • the process 80 returns to perform blocks 88 , 90 , and and 92 .
  • the server will have stored thereon an image of a larger size than those requested by various client browsers such that the server will resize or rescale an existing larger version of the requested image to a smaller version of the requested image to fulfill such requests.
  • the server may also resize an existing smaller image to a larger version in response to client browser requests.
  • the server may also store multiple versions of the same image in various sizes for more efficient and thus faster scaling and lower computational costs.
  • a smaller object namespace may be employed to improve the ability to cache images both on the server and on the client.
  • the request may reduce the number of parameters transmitted to the server and thus transmit only one parameter to the server.
  • the request to the server may specify the maximum size, e.g., the longest edge, for the requested image.
  • the JavaScript transmitted by the server may be configured to perform simple computations on the client.
  • the server may also transmit the width and height of the original, e.g., largest available, image to the client.
  • the aspect ratio of the image may be provided as a floating point number by the server although such an implementation may not be as general as transmitting the original size of the image.
  • the JavaScript performs a proportional resize based on the width and height of the original image.
  • the client may make a request to the server with only one parameter.
  • a request with in single parameter may help improve caching.
  • upsampling may be allowed or not.
  • the image may be clamped to its original dimensions or stretched to fill the size in the browser, at the client's option.
  • Proxies may be shown by using a smaller version of the same image to preview a larger image. This feature is enabled by determining the resulting image size prior to requesting the image and allowing the server to have knowledge of which image corresponds to which resolutions on the client.
  • zoom may be implemented to allow a cropped view of a large image, e.g., using a proxy while the image is loading and pan around within a viewport.
  • One method to impose such a limit may be to include certain predetermined rules with the JavaScript code such that no roundtrip is required for a client to make valid requests to a server.
  • rules include a list of valid sizes and/or math to compute valid sizes.
  • one rule may specify that the client may only request images whose longest edge is of a length (in pixels) that is a multiple of 16.
  • a list of precomputed sizes might be additionally or alternatively provided.

Abstract

Systems and methods for automatic display of scaled and/or resized images that fit within pre-defined areas in a web browser are disclosed. The method may be implemented using an image scaling JavaScript component embedded within a HTML document. Upon resizing the a client document browser in which the document is displayed, the component is resized and requests, receives and redisplays a resized image within the resized component from a server. By having the server perform the resizing, the resized image not only fits within the resized component but also maintains the quality of the image without the need for special client-side software.

Description

    BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • 1. Field of the Invention
  • The present invention relates generally to scaling and/or resizing of images for display over a network. More specifically, systems and methods for automatic display of scaled and/or resized images that fit within pre-defined areas in a web browser are disclosed.
  • 2. Description of Related Art
  • Web browsers are frequently used to display images stored on backend servers and transmitted over the Internet or other network. By default, web browsers generally display fixed-sized images. However, display of fixed-sized images is often undesirable. For example, on high resolution displays, images may appear small and may not take full advantage of the available space in the web browser window. As another example, in small web browser windows, large images may not fit within the viewable space of the browser window, requiring the end user to scroll in order to view the entire image.
  • Although web browsers generally display fixed-sized images by default, a request may be made by the webpage to the web browser to resize an image to a size depending on the size of the browser. However, the quality of the image resized by the web browser is often low, resulting in blocky poor quality images. In addition, because the web browser makes a single image transfer request from the backend server for each image, the largest possible image is transmitted to the web browser, regardless of the size of the image to be displayed within the browser. Where the image display area within the browser is small, the image is resized and extra data will be unnecessarily transferred, thereby introducing delay.
  • Thus, it would be desirable to provide systems and methods for automatic scaling and/or resizing of images to fit within a pre-defined area in a web browser. Ideally, such systems and methods result in high quality resizing of image and would not require special client-side software to be installed.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • Systems and methods for automatic display of scaled and/or resized images that fit within pre-defined areas in a web browser are disclosed. It should be appreciated that the present invention can be implemented in numerous ways, including as a process, an apparatus, a system, a device, a method, or a computer readable medium such as a computer readable storage medium or a computer network wherein program instructions are sent over optical or electronic communication lines. Several inventive embodiments of the present invention are described below.
  • The method, on a client side, for automatic display of resized images across a network generally include requesting a document, e.g., an HTML document, having a reference to an image from a server, displaying the document in a client document browser, e.g., a web page browser, displaying the image in the client document browser, automatically requesting a rescaled or resized image from the server upon resizing of the client document browser, receiving and displaying the rescaled or resized image received from the server in the client document browser.
  • On a server side, the method for automatic display of a resized image in a document across a network generally includes providing the document containing instructions for a client document browser to display the image within a component in the document, to rescale the component upon resizing of the client document browser, and to request a rescaled version of the image upon resizing of the client document browser, serving the document in response to a request for the document from the client document browser, and serving the image of a size specified by the client document browser to the client document browser.
  • The system for automatic display of a resized image in a document across a network may be implemented as a computer program product for use in conjunction with a computer system, the computer program product comprising a computer readable storage medium on which are stored instructions executable on a computer processor.
  • These and other features and advantages of the present invention will be presented in more detail in the following detailed description and the accompanying figures which illustrate by way of example principles of the invention.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • The present invention will be readily understood by the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals designate like structural elements.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates an exemplary system architecture and process for automatically displaying resized or rescaled images that fit within pre-defined areas in a web browser.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates an exemplary browser window displaying a webpage containing an image.
  • FIG. 3 illustrates an exemplary resizing of the browser window displaying the webpage of FIG. 2, the image being proportionately resized.
  • FIG. 4 is a flowchart of an exemplary client-side process for automatically displaying a resized image in a webpage upon resizing of a browser window.
  • FIG. 5 is a flowchart of an exemplary server-side process to enable a client-side browser to automatically display a resized image in a webpage upon resizing of a browser window.
  • DESCRIPTION OF SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS
  • Systems and methods for automatic display of scaled and/or resized images that fit within pre-defined areas in a web browser are disclosed. The following description is presented to enable any person skilled in the art to make and use the invention. Descriptions of specific embodiments and applications are provided only as examples and various modifications will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art. The general principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments and applications without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Thus, the present invention is to be accorded the widest scope encompassing numerous alternatives, modifications and equivalents consistent with the principles and features disclosed herein. For purpose of clarity, details relating to technical material that is known in the technical fields related to the invention have not been described in detail so as not to unnecessarily obscure the present invention.
  • The systems and methods described herein may be used in various applications for efficient rendering of a web page in a web browser. The systems and methods described herein generally works with standard web browsers such as Internet Explorer, Netscape Navigator, and Mozilla Firefox, without requiring special software be installed on the client side. In particular, the rescaling and/or resizing of images as described herein generally does not require special software to be installed on the client side and generally utilizes JavaScript. Although JavaScript is presented herein as illustrative methods for resizing images in browser windows, any other suitable methods may be similarly employed.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates an exemplary system architecture and process 10 for automatically displaying rescaled images in a web browser. The system enables a browser to deliver resized images to an end user, based on the user's viewing environment. As shown, a browser window 14 is open on a client device 12, such as a personal computer. The browser 14 may be, for example, a web browser, that communications with a server 18 via a network 16 such as the Internet. The server 18 typically stores a webpage 20, typically in HTML, one or more original image(s) 22 referenced by the webpage 20, an image scaling JavaScript component 24, and an image scaler 28 that can scale the original images 22 to specified sizes. Although represented as a single block, the server 18 may store data on one or across multiple servers, e.g., computers. For purposes of clarity, the server 18 is described herein as generally serving one webpage that contains one image although the server 18 may serve numerous webpages each containing one or multiple images.
  • The functions of the systems and methods for automatic scaling and/or resizing of images for display in a web browser will now be described in more detail with reference to FIGS. 2 and 3. In particular, FIG. 2 illustrates an exemplary browser window 30 displaying a webpage 32 containing an image 34. As shown in the illustrative webpage 32, the image 34 generally occupies the width of the browser window 30. Upon resizing of the browser window 30, the systems and methods described herein automatically displays a resized or rescaled image within the browser window. For example, as shown in FIG. 3, the resized browser window 36 displaying the webpage 32 is wider than that shown in FIG. 2. The image 38 displayed is proportionately resized within the resized browser window 36. In the example shown, the image 38 is resized to similarly occupy the width of the resized browser window 36. Although the above-described example illustrates an automatic resizing or rescaling that enlarges the image, the automatic resizing or rescaling of the image can be similarly applied to decrease the size of the image.
  • When the webpage initially loads in the browser window and/or when the browser window is resized, the image may be displayed using a JavaScript component. Generally, the JavaScript component can be embedded in a typical webpage and sized according to a fixed or relative size. A fixed size may be specified in terms of a fixed number of pixels. A relative size may be specified relative to the size of the browser window, e.g., image width equal to ½ the width of the browser window.
  • Once the JavaScript component determines the size of the image to be displayed, the JavaScript component makes a request to the backend server for an image scaled to fit within the available area of the component. When the server receives the request, the server may scale the image as requested using any suitable image scaling method. When the server responds with the appropriately scaled image, the browser window displays the scaled image in the JavaScript image component. Because the JavaScript component specifies the exact size to the backend server, the scaled image should fit within the available area of the JavaScript component.
  • The processes for the client-side and the server-side are described in more detail below with reference to FIGS. 4 and 5, respectively. In particular, FIG. 4 is a flowchart of an exemplary client-side process 50 for automatically displaying a resized image in a webpage upon resizing of a browser window. Specifically, a JavaScript component may be used to display images within a webpage.
  • At block 52, a user may request a web page using a browser via, e.g., the Internet or an intranet, where the web page contains at least one request for an image. At block 54, the browser receives and loads the web page, e.g., the HTML source code, from the server. In addition, the browser may also create the JavaScript component within the webpage at block 54.
  • To initially display the image and each time the image is resized due to, for example, browser window resizing at block 56, blocks 58, 60, 62, and 64 may be performed. At block 58, the JavaScript inside the component determines the size of the component and thus the size of the image to be requested from the backend server. In particular, the JavaScript awaits for and traps JavaScript resize events fired or sent by the browser. it is noted that when the component is initially created within the webpage, e.g., when the webpage initially loads in the browser window at block 54, the size of the component may generally be known. However, depending on the layout of the page, the size of the image component may not be known prior to the image component being created within the webpage.
  • The size of the image may be detecting based on a DIV (or browser window size or similar element in the browser). To request an image, the size may be transmitted to the server asynchronously. On handheld devices (where the browser typically occupies the entire screen), the request may instead include the display resolution. Alternatively or additionally, the display resolution may be determined from the browser identification string. In one example, the browser transmits a width and height to the server and the server, in response, serves the appropriately sized image.
  • At block 60, the JavaScript within the component transmits a request to the backend server for an image of the size that fits within the component, e.g., as determined in block 58. For example, if the component is 668 by 306 pixels, the JavaScript transmits a request to the backend server for an image that fits within the area of the component. In other words, when the browser window is resized, the JavaScript may transmit a request for a newly resized image from the backend server based on the new size of the component.
  • At block 62, after the image has been initially loaded and displayed, the webpage may optionally request the browser to resize and redisplay the image within the component upon browser resizing. In particular, while the component waits for the request for the newly resized image to be fulfilled by the backend server, the browser may temporarily display a rescaled image by rescaling the existing (already received on the end user/client side) image to fit within the new component size to give the end user a more immediate response. However, because this resizing is performed by the web browser, the quality of the rescaled image is typically lower than that provided by the server. Once the rescaled image from the server is received by the component, the image from the server replaces the temporary image at block 64. It is noted that although block 62 is shown to be performed after block 60 in the illustrative flowchart of FIG. 4, block 62 may be performed prior to block 60 is performed.
  • At block 64, when the browser receives the requested image from the backend server, the browser replaces the temporary image displayed at block 62 with the rescaled image received from the server. Because the resized image is scaled to fit within the area of the component, it would generally occupy the entire area. It is noted that if the backend server fails to respond to the request made by the JavaScript at block 62, the webpage may continue to display the temporary image rescaled by the browser at block 62. Each time the browser window is resized at block 66, the process 50 returns to perform blocks 58, 60, 62, and 64.
  • FIG. 5 is a flowchart of an exemplary server-side process 80 to enable a client-side browser to automatically display a resized image in a webpage upon resizing a browser window. At block 82, the server provides a webpage, typically in HTML, that contains at least one image. At block 84, the server serves the webpage in response to a browser request for the webpage. For each request for the image, e.g., initially or upon resizing of the browser, at block 86, blocks 88 and 90 are performed. At block 88, the server receives a request for the image of a specified size from client browser. At block 90, the server scales the image contained in the webpage according to the size requested by the client browser. The server may compute the scaled image on the fly or may retrieve the image from a set of precomputed sizes. At block 92, the server responds to the request by transmitting the scaled image to the client browser. Each time the server receives an image request, if any, at block 94, the process 80 returns to perform blocks 88, 90, and and 92.
  • Typically, the server will have stored thereon an image of a larger size than those requested by various client browsers such that the server will resize or rescale an existing larger version of the requested image to a smaller version of the requested image to fulfill such requests. However, it is to be understood that the server may also resize an existing smaller image to a larger version in response to client browser requests. Further, the server may also store multiple versions of the same image in various sizes for more efficient and thus faster scaling and lower computational costs.
  • In requesting the scale image from the server, a smaller object namespace may be employed to improve the ability to cache images both on the server and on the client. For example, in one illustrative implementation, a request called “GetImage?width=640&height=480” may retrieve the same image as “GetImage?width=640&height=490”. However, a simple caching server may not notice this and an intermediate proxy or a browser cache also may not notice this. Thus in another illustrative implementation, the request may reduce the number of parameters transmitted to the server and thus transmit only one parameter to the server. As an example, the request to the server may specify the maximum size, e.g., the longest edge, for the requested image.
  • The JavaScript transmitted by the server may be configured to perform simple computations on the client. The server may also transmit the width and height of the original, e.g., largest available, image to the client. Alternatively, the aspect ratio of the image may be provided as a floating point number by the server although such an implementation may not be as general as transmitting the original size of the image.
  • The JavaScript performs a proportional resize based on the width and height of the original image. As a result, the client may make a request to the server with only one parameter. As noted above, a request with in single parameter may help improve caching. In addition, upsampling may be allowed or not. Specifically, the image may be clamped to its original dimensions or stretched to fill the size in the browser, at the client's option. Proxies may be shown by using a smaller version of the same image to preview a larger image. This feature is enabled by determining the resulting image size prior to requesting the image and allowing the server to have knowledge of which image corresponds to which resolutions on the client. Further, zoom may be implemented to allow a cropped view of a large image, e.g., using a proxy while the image is loading and pan around within a viewport.
  • In some cases, it may be desirable to limit the quantity of unique images that a client can request from the server. One method to impose such a limit may be to include certain predetermined rules with the JavaScript code such that no roundtrip is required for a client to make valid requests to a server. Examples of such rules include a list of valid sizes and/or math to compute valid sizes. For example, one rule may specify that the client may only request images whose longest edge is of a length (in pixels) that is a multiple of 16. As another example, a list of precomputed sizes might be additionally or alternatively provided.
  • While the exemplary embodiments of the present invention are described and illustrated herein, it will be appreciated that they are merely illustrative and that modifications can be made to these embodiments without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the systems and methods described herein are preferably implemented without requiring special software be installed on the client side, as generally described in the illustrative examples presented. As one alternative, the systems and methods may be implemented as a web browser plug-in, for example. However, such alternative methodologies require the user to install special client software. Thus, the scope of the invention is intended to be defined only in terms of the following claims as may be amended, with each claim being expressly incorporated into this Description of Specific Embodiments as an embodiment of the invention.

Claims (21)

1-40. (canceled)
41. A method for automatic resizing of an image in a document for display across a network, comprising:
serving, to a client computing device, the document, the document containing instructions for a client document browser for execution on the client computing device, to display the image within the client document browser, the document comprising an embedded image scaling component, the component being embedded in the document and being sized relative to a size of the client document browser and configured to determine the size of the image based on the size of the component and to request from a server an image scaled to fit within the determined size and to request from the browser a temporary, resized image temporarily displayed within the component, and to replace the temporary, resized image with the scaled image when received; and
receiving the request and, in response, serving to the client computing device the scaled image in response to the request for the scaled image from the client document browser.
42. The method of claim 41, further comprising, prior to serving the image:
(i) scaling a stored image to the size or a resolution specified in the request from the client document browser; or
(ii) retrieving a stored version of the image of the same or similar size or resolution specified in the request from the client document browser.
43. The method of claim 41, wherein the component is a JavaScript component.
44. The method of claim 43, wherein the JavaScript component is configured to trap JavaScript resize events fired by the client document browser.
45. The method of claim 41, wherein the request for the scaled version of the image contains at least one parameter selected from a group consisting of a length, a width, and a resolution.
46. The method of claim 41, wherein instructions to request the scaled version of the image upon resizing of the client document browser are contained in the component.
47. The method of claim 41, wherein the document further contains instructions for the client document browser to, upon resizing of the client document browser, resize the image displayed in the component prior to the resizing of the client document browser and temporarily display the image resized by the client document browser within the component.
48. A system for automatic resizing of an image in a document for display across a network, comprising:
storage for storing the document that can be served to a client computing device, the document comprising an embedded image scaling component, and an image referenced by the document, the document containing instructions for a client document browser for execution on the client computing device, to display the image within the client document browser, the component being embedded in the document, and being sized relative to a size of the client document browser and configured to determine the size of the image based on the size of the component and to request from a server an image scaled to fit within the determined size and to request from the browser a temporary, resized image temporarily displayed within the component, and to replace the temporary, resized image with the scaled image when received; and
a server for serving the document to the client computing device and for receiving the request for the scaled image and serving to the client computing device the scaled image in response.
49. The system of claim 48, wherein the server scales a stored image to the size or resolution specified in the request from the client document browser or retrieves a stored version of the image of the same or similar size or resolution specified in the request from the client document browser.
50. The system of claim 48, wherein the component is a JavaScript component.
51. The system of claim 50, wherein the JavaScript component is configured to trap JavaScript resize events fired by the client document browser.
52. The system of claim 48, wherein the request for the scaled version of the image contains at least one parameter selected from a group consisting of a length, a width, and a resolution.
53. The system of claim 48, wherein instructions to request the scaled version of the image are contained in the component.
54. The system of claim 48, wherein the document further contains instructions for the client document browser to, upon resizing of the client document browser, resize the image displayed in the component prior to the resizing of the client document browser and temporarily display the image resized by the client document browser within the component.
55. A computer readable storage medium having computer program logic recorded thereon for enabling a processor to automatically resize an image in a document for display across a network, comprising:
a storage module configured to store a document that can be served to a client computing device, the document comprising an embedded image scaling component, and an image referenced by the document, the document containing instructions for a client document browser for execution on the client computing device, to display the image within the client document browser, the component being embedded in the document, and being sized relative to a size of the client document browser and configured to determine the size of the image based on the size of the component and to request from a server an image scaled to fit within the determined size and to request from the browser a temporary, resized image temporarily displayed within the component, and to replace the temporary, resized image with the scaled image when received; and
a server module configured to serve the document to the client computing device and to receive the request for the scaled image and serve to the client computing device a scaled image in response.
56. The computer readable storage medium of claim 55, wherein the server module is further configured to scale a stored image to the size or resolution specified in the request from the client document browser or retrieve a stored version of the image of the same or similar size or resolution specified in the request from the client document browser.
57. The computer readable storage medium of claim 55, wherein the component is a JavaScript component.
58. The computer readable storage medium of claim 57, wherein the JavaScript component is configured to trap JavaScript resize events fired by the client document browser.
59. The computer readable storage medium of claim 55, wherein the request for the scaled version of the image contains at least one parameter selected from a group consisting of a length, a width, and a resolution.
60. The computer readable storage medium of claim 55, wherein instructions to request the scaled version of the image are contained in the component.
US14/161,684 2006-03-15 2014-01-22 Automatic display of resized images Abandoned US20140281926A1 (en)

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CA2645817C (en) 2016-05-03
AU2007227611A1 (en) 2007-09-27
BRPI0709548A2 (en) 2011-07-19
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JP5129229B2 (en) 2013-01-30
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KR20080109852A (en) 2008-12-17

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