DOTM to PALM Converter

Convert DOTM templates to PALM — free online tool

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Specialized Output

The PALM format serves specific workflows. Converting DOTM gives you template content in exactly the format you need.

No Hidden Code

All macros and executable content from the DOTM are eliminated. The PALM output contains only image data.

Online Processing

No specialized tools needed on your machine. Convertio servers handle the entire DOTM to PALM conversion remotely.

How to convert DOTM to PALM

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose palm or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your palm file right afterwards

About formats

DOTM is a macro-enabled template format for Microsoft Word, introduced with Office 2007 as part of the Office Open XML family. DOTM combines the template functionality of DOTX — providing reusable styles, page layouts, boilerplate content, and formatting definitions — with the ability to embed VBA macro code that executes in documents created from the template. The format is a ZIP archive containing XML parts for styles, document defaults, and theme definitions, plus a vbaProject.bin stream for the VBA project. This combination enables organizations to distribute not just visual consistency but also functional automation: every document created from a DOTM template inherits both the formatting framework and programmatic capabilities. Common use cases include templates that auto-populate document fields from corporate directories, enforce naming conventions, generate tables of contents, insert dynamic headers with project metadata, or validate document structure before submission. One advantage is embedded workflow automation — a DOTM template can include initialization macros that configure the document environment, register custom ribbon commands, and connect to data sources the moment a new document is created from it. The distinct .dotm extension allows administrators to apply differentiated trust policies for macro-containing templates versus standard DOTX files. DOTM is supported exclusively in Microsoft Word desktop editions where VBA execution is available.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: January 30, 2007
PALM is a bitmap image format used by the Palm OS operating system, introduced in 1996 with the original Palm Pilot 1000. Palm bitmap files store raster images in formats optimized for the extremely constrained hardware of early Palm handheld devices — the original models featured a 160x160 pixel monochrome (2-shade) display, 128 KB of RAM, and a 16 MHz Motorola 68328 processor. The format evolved through several versions as Palm hardware improved: PalmOS 1.0 supported 1-bit monochrome, later versions added 2-bit (4 shade grayscale), 4-bit (16 shade), 8-bit (256 color), and eventually 16-bit (65536 color) direct color modes. Palm bitmaps use a simple header specifying width, height, row bytes, flags, and bit depth, followed by the pixel data which may use optional Scanline compression (a PackBits-like run-length encoding) or dense packing. The format also supports bitmap families — multiple versions of the same image at different bit depths bundled together, allowing the OS to select the best version for the current device's display capabilities. One advantage is the format's documentation of early mobile computing: Palm OS was the dominant handheld platform of the late 1990s and early 2000s, and Palm bitmap files from applications, games, and content of that era represent important artifacts of mobile computing history. The multi-depth bitmap family feature provides another notable design strength — a single resource could serve devices ranging from monochrome Palm Pilots to the 16-bit color Sony CLIE and Palm Tungsten. PALM bitmaps are supported by ImageMagick, pilot-link utilities, and Palm emulator tools.
Developer: Palm, Inc.
Initial release: 1996

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DOTM to PALM?

Palm OS bitmap is the bitmap format for Palm OS devices — needed when creating visual content for Palm platform applications.

What opens PALM files?

Palm OS devices, Calibre, and Palm development tools can open and work with PALM files.

Is document content preserved?

The visible content from your DOTM template — text, tables, and images — renders into the PALM output as image data.

Are macros removed in PALM?

Yes — PALM is an image format with no macro support. All VBA code from the DOTM template is completely stripped out.

Is DOTM to PALM free?

Yes, Convertio provides free DOTM to PALM conversion. Premium plans offer expanded limits and priority processing speeds.

Does batch conversion work?

Upload several DOTM files and each converts to its own PALM image — all processed in parallel for efficiency.