what are .webp files and why has my online experience been plagued by them?
I don't know what a .webp file is but I don't like it. They're like a filthy prank version of the image/gif you're looking for. They make you jump through all these hoops to find the original versions of the files that you can actually do anything with.
Edit: honestly I assumed it had something to do with Google protecting themselves from image piracy shit
Can someone give me an example where webp gets in the way? I've been using it for a while and both macOS and Windows seem to support the format without any third party extensions for a while now and so do the Affinity apps.
I can use webp like any other image format at this point.
Adobe has no time for it, so it ads that annoying extra step when collecting assets. I would appreciate Adobe support for it natively in Pr / Ps / Ae / Me and I'm cool with it.
Wow, doesn't surprise me that Adobe does not support it. They still don't support full screen or native dark mode on macOS in After Effects. Guess poor Adobe can't be bothered to update basic functionality.
I have an older version of Office (and more importantly, Access) at work which doesn't want to hear anything about .webp. When I need to make a document containing product pictures for a customer, .webp is a huge annoyance and time waste. Luckily the Firefox extension that bans .webp and forces .png or .jpg saves the day.
Transcoding and serving images as .webp as default is fine for saving BW and all that jazz, but when I click "Save image as" I should automagically end up on my disk with the original image format whatever that might be. But since that doesn't seem to be a thing, I'll happily find a way to force the server to serve the original all the time since for me BW is not a problem, but I don't want to waste time converting every image before I can actually use it.
I often will use the Windows Snipping Tool to screenshot, then copy/paste the screenshot. This also works around sites trying to block you from right-clicking images. Granted you're limited to screen resolution then but web images are almost always so tiny anyways that makes little difference most of the time