PAL to JBIG Converter

Turn PAL images into JBIG format online for free

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Easy Download

Once the PAL to JBIG conversion finishes, download your file with one click. Results are available for 24 hours after processing.

No Software Needed

Convert PAL to JBIG directly in your browser — no app installs, plugins, or downloads. Just open the page and start converting.

Simple Workflow

Converting PAL to JBIG takes three steps — upload, choose the format, and download. No technical expertise or special knowledge required.

How to convert PAL to JBIG

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

PAL is a 16-bit per pixel interleaved YUV image format that stores color information using a luminance-chrominance model rather than direct RGB values. Each pixel pair is packed into four bytes using the UYVY byte ordering — U (Cb), Y0, V (Cr), Y1 — where two adjacent pixels share a single set of chroma (color difference) samples while each retaining its own luminance (brightness) value. This 4:2:2 chroma subsampling halves the color resolution horizontally with negligible perceptual impact, since human vision is far more sensitive to brightness variations than color detail. The format traces its conceptual roots to analog broadcast television standards developed during the 1960s and 1970s, where separating luminance and chrominance enabled backward-compatible color transmission alongside existing monochrome signals. In digital imaging, 16-bit YUV serves as a common intermediate representation for video capture hardware, frame grabbers, and image processing pipelines that work in the YCbCr color space internally before converting to RGB for display. One advantage is bandwidth efficiency: at 16 bits per pixel, UYVY requires roughly two-thirds the data of uncompressed 24-bit RGB while preserving virtually identical perceived quality, making it well suited for high-throughput video capture and real-time image processing applications. The format's direct correspondence to how video hardware captures and outputs data provides another practical benefit — many capture cards and camera sensors natively produce UYVY data, so storing it in PAL form avoids an unnecessary color space conversion step that would add latency and introduce rounding artifacts.
Developer: ITU-T / Microsoft
Initial release: 1982
JBIG (Joint Bi-level Image experts Group) is a lossless image compression standard (ITU-T T.82) published in 1993, developed by a committee of experts drawn from the same international standards bodies that created JPEG. While the extension .jbig and .jbg refer to the same underlying compression standard, .jbig is the more explicit form commonly used in software that handles the raw JBIG-compressed datastream. The compression algorithm centers on context-dependent arithmetic coding: before encoding each pixel, the encoder examines a configurable template of 10 to 16 nearby pixels (a mix of neighbors from the current and previous lines) to determine a context — one of thousands of possible local pixel configurations. Each context maintains its own adaptive probability estimate that is continually updated as encoding proceeds, allowing the coder to exploit the statistical patterns unique to each image region. This approach handles text, line art, halftoned photographs, and mixed-content pages with a single algorithm, achieving consistently better compression than the fixed Huffman tables of Group 3 or the simpler prediction model of Group 4. A later revision, JBIG2 (T.88), added pattern matching and lossy modes for even higher compression, but the original JBIG remains widely deployed. One advantage is the algorithm's adaptiveness: unlike Group 3/4 codecs that use fixed statistical models, JBIG continuously learns the characteristics of each specific image as it encodes, providing near-optimal compression across widely varying content types. The standard is embedded in many multifunction printers and document scanners for internal image handling. JBIG files are processable by ImageMagick, jbigkit, and enterprise document imaging systems.
Initial release: 1993

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert PAL to JBIG?

The PAL format is niche and rarely supported. JBIG gives your images universal compatibility across operating systems and applications.

What programs open JBIG files?

JBIG files open in most image viewers and editors — including web browsers, system preview tools, Photoshop, GIMP, and Paint on Windows.

Where do PAL files come from?

PAL files originate from broadcast and video processing pipelines. They store raw YUV pixel data and typically require conversion for viewing.

Is batch PAL to JBIG conversion supported?

You can queue multiple PAL files and convert them to JBIG in one go. Each file processes independently and downloads separately.

Is my PAL data kept private?

Uploaded files are deleted immediately after conversion, and converted files are removed within 24 hours. Your data stays private and secure.