HTML to VIFF Converter

Save web pages as VIFF visualization images — free online

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Scientific Imaging

VIFF is built for visualization workflows — import web page captures directly into scientific and data analysis tools.

Browser-Based

Convert any URL to VIFF entirely from your web browser — no Khoros or visualization software needed locally.

Data Security

Uploaded pages are deleted after conversion, and VIFF output files are automatically removed within 24 hours.

How to convert HTML to VIFF

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

HTML (HyperText Markup Language) is the standard markup language for creating web pages, originally conceived by Tim Berners-Lee at CERN in 1991 and later standardized by the W3C and WHATWG. HTML structures content using a system of nested tags that define headings, paragraphs, lists, links, images, tables, forms, and multimedia elements, with CSS handling visual presentation and JavaScript adding interactivity. The language has evolved through major versions — HTML 2.0 (1995), HTML 4.01 (1999), XHTML 1.0 (2000), and the current HTML Living Standard (evolved from HTML5, published 2014) — each expanding semantic vocabulary and capabilities. HTML documents are plain text files interpretable by any web browser, and the language's role extends beyond websites: email formatting, ebook content (EPUB), application interfaces (Electron, Cordova), and document export all rely on HTML. One advantage is universal rendering — every computing device with a browser displays HTML content, making it the most widely supported document format in existence. The semantic markup model provides another strength: elements like <article>, <nav>, <aside>, and <figure> carry meaning that benefits accessibility tools, search engine indexing, and content reuse. The open, W3C/WHATWG-governed specification ensures vendor independence, and HTML's text-based nature means documents are trivially created, inspected, and processed with any programming language.
Initial release: 1993
VIFF (Visualization Image File Format) is a scientific image format developed by Khoral Research (originally at the University of New Mexico), first appearing around 1990 with the Khoros visual programming environment for image processing and data visualization. VIFF files use a 1024-byte header followed by optional color map data, and the image data itself, with the header containing detailed specifications: data storage type (bit, byte, short, integer, float, double, complex), data encoding (none, CCITT Group 3/4), color space model (none, generic, RGB, HSI, CMYK, and others), and support for multi-band (multi-channel) images with arbitrary numbers of bands. The format accommodates one-dimensional signals, two-dimensional images, three-dimensional volumes, and location data (sparse pixel coordinates), making it versatile beyond simple image storage. VIFF was designed for the Khoros/VisiQuest visual dataflow programming environment, where users constructed image processing pipelines by connecting processing nodes in a graphical canvas — an approach that influenced later systems like AVS, MATLAB Simulink, and LabVIEW. One advantage is scientific data fidelity: VIFF supports the full range of numeric types used in scientific computing (including complex numbers and double-precision floats), stores multi-band datasets natively, and carries calibration metadata — making it suitable for remote sensing, medical imaging, and spectral analysis applications where generic image formats lose information. The format's connection to the Khoros visual programming paradigm provides another notable dimension — VIFF was the standard I/O format for one of the most influential early visual programming environments for scientific image analysis. VIFF files can be read by ImageMagick and legacy Khoros/VisiQuest installations.
Developer: Khoral Research
Initial release: 1990

Frequently Asked Questions

Why capture a web page as VIFF?

VIFF is used in scientific visualization — converting a webpage to VIFF lets you import the render into data analysis tools.

How do I convert a URL to VIFF?

Paste any public web address into the converter, select VIFF as the output, and Convertio renders and delivers the image.

What software opens VIFF images?

Khoros/VisiQuest, ImageMagick, and certain scientific visualization tools support VIFF for viewing and analysis.

Does VIFF preserve visual quality?

Yes — VIFF stores full image data with metadata support, preserving the visual quality of the rendered web page.

Is the converter free?

Yes — HTML to VIFF conversion is free on Convertio. Premium plans add batch processing and priority queue access.

Is the conversion fast?

Cloud servers render and encode your page to VIFF in seconds — efficient processing regardless of page complexity.

HTML to VIFF Quality Rating

3.8 (6 votes)
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