Apparently. I had read Vladimirr's link once before sometime, but I must have missed this (or maybe PNG didn't exist yet at the time):
http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/pngintro.htmlQuote:
PronunciationNo detail was too small for consideration in the authors' quest for a near-perfect image format; yea, verily, even the acronym and pronunciation were major topics of discussion. The reason, of course, is the GIF format; some pronounce it with a soft G like giraffe, some with a hard G like gift, and no one really knows what they're talking about. (For the record, the soft G is correct; it is how the author of the format pronounces it.)
"PNG" is always spelled* "PNG" (or "Portable Network Graphics") and always pronounced "ping" in English, not "pinj" or "pee en gee" or any other multi-syllabic disaster. (For non-English speakers, the three-letter pronunciation is fine, however.) See the introduction to the PNG specification (or the Scope section of the newer ISO/IEC/W3C version) for the definitive statement on the matter.
* Greg follows American English rules, but read spelt here if you "favour" the British "flavour."
http://www.w3.org/TR/PNG/Quote:
1 Scope
This International Standard specifies a datastream and an associated file format, Portable Network Graphics (PNG, pronounced "ping"), for a lossless, portable, compressed individual computer graphics image transmitted across the Internet. Indexed-colour, greyscale, and truecolour images are supported, with optional transparency. Sample depths range from 1 to 16 bits. PNG is fully streamable with a progressive display option. It is robust, providing both full file integrity checking and simple detection of common transmission errors. PNG can store gamma and chromaticity data as well as a full ICC colour profile for accurate colour matching on heterogenous platforms. This Standard defines the Internet Media type "image/png". The datastream and associated file format have value outside of the main design goal.
...well, ****.