CID to WBMP Converter

Render CID font glyphs as wireless bitmap images for mobile use

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Minimal File Size

WBMP at 1 bit per pixel creates the most compact raster output possible from your CID font — ideal for constrained environments.

CID to Monochrome

Transform CID-keyed CJK characters into crisp black-and-white bitmaps suitable for WAP pages, e-ink displays, and embedded systems.

Processed Remotely

Conversion runs on Convertio servers. Get your WBMP output without installing image processing tools or font rendering software.

How to convert CID 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

CID (Character Identifier) is a font architecture developed by Adobe Systems and specified in June 1993 to address the challenges of fonts containing very large glyph sets, particularly for CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) scripts. Traditional PostScript fonts identify glyphs by name, which becomes impractical when a font contains tens of thousands of characters — a typical Japanese font may include over 20,000 glyphs. CID-keyed fonts replace glyph names with numeric identifiers organized by a character collection and ordering (such as Adobe-Japan1 or Adobe-GB1), dramatically reducing overhead for glyph access and subsetting. The architecture defines three PostScript font types: Type 9 (CID-keyed Type 1 outlines), Type 10 (CID-keyed Type 3), and Type 11 (CID-keyed Type 42/TrueType). A primary advantage is efficient handling of massive character sets — the numeric CID approach eliminates the memory and processing cost of maintaining thousands of glyph name strings. CID fonts also support sophisticated CMap resources that map encoding values to CIDs, enabling a single font to serve multiple encoding schemes (Unicode, Shift-JIS, Big5) without duplicating glyph data. The architecture integrates well with PDF subsetting, allowing documents to embed only the glyphs actually used. CID-keyed technology laid the foundation for CJK support in both OpenType and modern PDF workflows, and remains active in print production and document processing systems worldwide.
Developer: Adobe Systems
Initial release: June 11, 1993
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 CID to WBMP?

WBMP is a 1-bit monochrome format designed for low-bandwidth devices. It produces ultra-lightweight glyph images for WAP and embedded displays.

How do I view WBMP images?

GIMP, IrfanView, and XnView open WBMP files. WAP-enabled browsers and some embedded display systems also render the format natively.

Is WBMP only black and white?

Yes — WBMP is strictly monochrome (1 bit per pixel). CJK glyph outlines are rendered as pure black on white with no anti-aliasing.

Are the files very small?

Extremely. At 1 bit per pixel, WBMP produces the smallest possible raster images — ideal for bandwidth-constrained environments.

Is CID to WBMP free?

Yes — Convertio handles this conversion at no cost. Upload your CID font and download the WBMP output from any browser.