JPS to OTB Converter

Transform JPS photos into OTB format online free

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Secure Processing

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

Any Device

Convert JPS to OTB on Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, or Android. The browser-based tool works identically across every platform.

Cloud Processing

Conversion happens on Convertio servers — your device stays free and responsive. No CPU-intensive processing on your local machine at all.

How to convert JPS to OTB

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

JPS (JPEG Stereo) is a stereoscopic 3D image format that stores a left-eye and right-eye view pair within a single JPEG-compressed file, developed by VRex, Inc. around 1997 for use with stereoscopic displays and viewers. A JPS file is technically a standard JPEG file containing a side-by-side stereo pair — the left and right perspective images are placed horizontally adjacent within a single frame, with the full image width being twice the individual view width. The file uses standard JPEG compression and can be opened by any JPEG-compatible viewer (which will show the side-by-side pair as a single wide image), but stereo-aware applications parse the image into its left and right components for proper 3D presentation. JPS files can be viewed with dedicated stereoscopic software, anaglyph viewers (generating red-cyan images for colored glasses), autostereoscopic displays, VR headsets, and hardware like NVIDIA 3D Vision or passive 3D monitors. The format gained renewed interest with the consumer 3D photography boom of the late 2000s and early 2010s, when cameras like the Fujifilm FinePix Real 3D W1/W3 captured stereo pairs natively. One advantage is backward compatibility: because JPS uses standard JPEG encoding, the files work with existing JPEG infrastructure — they can be transmitted, stored, thumbnailed, and even viewed (as flat side-by-side images) without any special software. The format's simplicity is another practical strength — no specialized container or codec is required, and any tool that can crop and display JPEG images can extract individual views. JPS files are supported by StereoPhoto Maker, ImageMagick, and various 3D photo viewers.
Developer: VRex, Inc.
Initial release: 1997
OTB (Over-the-Air Bitmap) is a monochrome image format developed by Nokia as part of their Smart Messaging specification in 1997, designed for transmitting small graphics — operator logos, group graphics, and picture messages — to Nokia mobile phones via SMS. OTB files contain 1-bit (black and white) images at small fixed resolutions, typically 72x14 pixels for operator logos and 72x28 pixels for group graphics, encoded in a compact binary format suitable for embedding within the payload of SMS text messages. The format uses a simple structure: a header byte indicating whether the image is an operator logo or group graphic, width and height values, and the raw bitmap data where each bit represents one pixel packed eight per byte. The extremely tight format — designed to fit within a single SMS message (140 bytes maximum payload, shared with addressing overhead) — reflects the severe constraints of mobile communication in the late 1990s. Nokia's Smart Messaging system was one of the first commercial implementations of rich content delivery to mobile phones, and OTB images represented the entire visual content capability of Nokia handsets before MMS and mobile data browsing arrived. One advantage is the format's historical role as a pioneer of mobile visual messaging: OTB images were among the first graphics that ordinary consumers could send to each other's phones, predating MMS, camera phones, and smartphones by nearly a decade. The format's minimal footprint is another characteristic — entire images fit in a few dozen bytes, reflecting an era of extreme bandwidth constraints. OTB files are supported by ImageMagick, various Nokia phone management tools, and specialty mobile format utilities.
Developer: Nokia
Initial release: 1997

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert JPS to OTB?

OTB may be required by specific software, hardware, or workflows. Converting from JPS ensures your image meets the format requirements of the target system.

What programs open OTB?

Use Nokia phones natively, XnView, ImageMagick to view and edit OTB. The format is well-supported across popular software packages.

Is batch JPS to OTB conversion supported?

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

How long does JPS to OTB conversion take?

Most conversions finish within seconds. Processing time depends on image size and server load, but JPS to OTB is typically very quick.

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.tools and convert.

Will my image lose quality?

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