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This is a summary of a slack discussion, started by Maria Panneer Rajan 

Storing Annotated Drawings as Raster-Images-with-Alpha

For 2D media ( image-sequences/quicktimes ) reviews, what is the value we are providing to artists and reviewers by storing the reviewer's annotated drawings as a vector ?Can't we just render the annotated drawings created by a reviewer on respective frames into raster-images-with-alpha using a format such as PNG ?And then, when the artist or reviewer wants to see that annotation that was done on a particular version of daily media ( image-sequence/quicktime ) we can just overlay the appropriate annotated raster-image-with-alpha on top right ?

Q: Sam: Does the alpha contain the brushstrokes for the annotations rather than the original image alpha?

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Advantages of using Annotated-Raster-Images-with-Alpha :

  1. Since these annotated-raster-images-with-alpha will be rendered with the same resolution as the daily ( image-sequence/quicktime ) on top of which they were drawn on, the annotated-raster-images-with-alpha will always preserve the same quality as the daily ( image-sequence/quicktime ) no matter what device they are played on.
  2. Even when the resolution of the daily (image-sequence/quicktime ) needs to changed to create a down-rezed proxy, the same down-rezing can also be done to the annotated-raster-images-with-alpha.
  3. The same is true even when you need to crop the daily (image-sequence/quicktime ), you can do the same cropping to the corresponding annotated-raster-images-with-alpha .
  4. And since we are storing only the annotated-drawings ( and not redunduntly storing redundantly storing the image below ) as raster-images-with-alpha the file size of these will also be small.
  5. And since we are literally creating a rendered annotated-raster-image-with-alpha, there is no limitation to the drawing tools ( brushes, strokes, symbols, stickers, emojis, etc. ) that a reviewer can use while doing their reviews.
  6. Reproducibility is a bit of a concern (missing fonts, different text or emoji rendering, etc.), whereas with raster images you see exactly what the annotator saw, even though you may not be able to re-create it in your tool / on your system.

Advantages  in using Vector Annotations:

  1. At-least based on my limited understanding, for 2D reviews, the only advantage of storing annotations as vectors is, after importing back a vector-annotation we will be able to edit/modify the annotated vector strokes more easily. But 90% of the time, reviewers/artists won't be editing/modifying already drawn annotations right ? - Sam: The assumption is that we are not editing them.
  2. For reviewing in a 3D space storing the annotated strokes as vectors will be beneficial.
  3. Vectors are much smaller data for the average annotation. They therefore transfer more easily in sync sessions. For more complex annotations a raster image might become smaller.
  4. Vectors map better to the recorded input so it's easier to develop with, because you don't have to manage undo stacks with different data
  5. Easier to append metadata like user id to strokes with vectors for multi session recordings, also useful to timestamp strokes to align them to audio/speech to text.
  6. For the case where text is part of the annotation, the text can be searchable.
  7. Much easier to have a single file containing summary of a review, including all notes and annotations.