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Cool pic! Wanna save it as a jpeg? Or a jpg? Whats raw? Thats supposed to be better right? Or hey lets get things moving and make it a gif! JIF! Whatever! This is DIY in 5!! Hey everyone! My name is Trisha Hershberger and you are watching DIY in 5, The show where we make tech simple enough that you can do it yourself. Today were going to go over the various types of image file formats used, and what their differences are and why you might choose one over another. What I will not dictate to you is how to pronounce the g-i-f file format - tomato, tomahto - thats up to you. Before we dive in, one quick request. If you find the content in todays video useful, please click that thumbs up to like this video and subscribe to the channel so you dont miss out on any future tech tips. There are two primary types of image files: raster images, also known as bitmap, are pixel-based graphics that exist at one resolution, and vector images, which are geometry-based graphics where the resolut