JPE to WBMP Converter

JPE to WBMP — transform your images online for free

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Secure Processing

Your JPE images stay safe — uploads are deleted post-conversion, and all WBMP outputs are purged from servers within 24 hours automatically.

Optimized Output

Get clean WBMP output from your JPE source — the conversion optimizes format-specific parameters for the best possible visual result.

Batch Support

Convert multiple JPE images to WBMP in one session. Upload a batch, select the format once, and download all results — saves significant time.

How to convert JPE to WBMP

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

JPE is an alternate file extension for JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) compressed images, functionally identical to .jpg and .jpeg files. The .jpe extension originated in early computing environments where three-character file extensions were the norm (as on MS-DOS and Windows 3.x), and some applications registered .jpe as an additional JPEG-associated extension alongside .jpg. JPE files contain standard JPEG-compressed data: the same DCT-based lossy compression that transforms 8x8 pixel blocks into frequency coefficients, quantizes them according to quality settings, and encodes the result using Huffman entropy coding. The file structure follows the JFIF or Exif specification, beginning with an SOI marker (0xFFD8), followed by application-specific markers (APP0 for JFIF, APP1 for Exif), quantization and Huffman table definitions, and the entropy-coded image data. JPE files support 8-bit grayscale and 24-bit color images at any resolution, and may contain embedded ICC color profiles, Exif metadata from digital cameras (exposure, GPS, lens data), IPTC captions, and XMP metadata. The JPEG compression algorithm achieves its remarkable efficiency by exploiting the human visual system's reduced sensitivity to high-frequency spatial detail and color differences — discarding information the eye cannot readily perceive. One advantage is the extension's broad registration in MIME type databases and file association tables, ensuring that email clients, web servers, and operating systems recognize .jpe files as JPEG images and handle them correctly. The format's universal reach is another definitive strength — JPE/JPEG is supported by literally every image-capable software and hardware device manufactured in the last three decades. Files are processable by any tool that handles JPEG, including all browsers, editors, and programming libraries.
Initial release: 1992
WBMP (Wireless Bitmap) is a monochrome (1-bit, black and white) image format defined as part of the Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) specification, developed by the WAP Forum (later consolidated into the Open Mobile Alliance) around 1998. The format was designed for the extremely constrained mobile devices of the late 1990s and early 2000s — phones with small monochrome screens, minimal processing power, and narrow bandwidth GSM data connections. WBMP uses the simplest possible encoding: a type identifier byte (always 0 for the only defined type), width and height encoded as multi-byte integers using a variable-length scheme, and the raw pixel data where each bit represents one pixel (0 for white, 1 for black) packed eight per byte. There is no compression, no metadata, and no color — the format is purely a minimal container for delivering small monochrome graphics to WAP-era mobile browsers. One advantage was extreme efficiency on constrained devices — WBMP images could be decoded with virtually zero CPU overhead and minimal memory, critical on early mobile hardware running at single-digit megahertz clock speeds. The tiny file sizes are another strength: a typical WBMP icon occupied just a few hundred bytes, practical for transfer over 9.6 kbps GSM data channels. While the WAP ecosystem has been entirely superseded by modern mobile web browsers capable of rendering full-color JPEG, PNG, and WebP images, WBMP files remain encountered in archived mobile content from that transitional era.
Developer: WAP Forum
Initial release: 1998

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert JPE to WBMP?

WBMP is designed for mobile devices with limited bandwidth. Converting JPE to WBMP creates monochrome bitmaps optimized for constrained display environments.

What opens WBMP format?

Use GIMP, mobile browsers (older devices), XnView, IrfanView to view and edit WBMP. The format is well-supported across popular software packages.

Is batch JPE to WBMP conversion supported?

Absolutely. Queue up multiple JPE images in a single session and convert them all to WBMP simultaneously — no need to process one at a time.

Will my image lose quality?

Image fidelity is maintained as well as WBMP allows. The converter optimizes the transformation to preserve maximum visual quality during processing.

Does this work on mobile devices?

Yes — the converter runs in any modern web browser, including mobile. Whether you use iOS, Android, Windows, or macOS, just open convertio.co and convert.

JPE to WBMP Quality Rating

4.9 (7 votes)
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