MJPEG to WTV Converter

Online MJPEG to WTV conversion — quick and hassle-free

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Quality Preservation

Converting MJPEG to WTV retains visual clarity and audio fidelity. Choose matching bitrate settings to keep output close to the original.

Adjustable Settings

Fine-tune video parameters — codec, bitrate, and quality — before converting to tailor the output precisely.

Cloud Conversion

Processing runs entirely in the cloud, so your computer or phone does none of the heavy lifting. Just upload and download.

How to convert MJPEG to WTV

1

Select or drag&drop MJPEG video to convert it to the WTV format from your computer, iPhone or Android. Moreover, it is possible to choose it from your Google Drive or Dropbox account.

2

Now your video is uploaded and you can start the MJPEG to WTV conversion. If it is needed, change the output format to one of the 37 video formats supported. After that, you can add more videos for batch conversion.

3

If you want, you can customize such settings as resolution, quality, aspect ratio and others by clicking the gear icon. Apply them to all the video files if necessary and click the button "Convert" to process.

4

Once your video is converted and edited, you can download it to your Mac, PC or another device. If necessary, save the file to your Dropbox or Google Drive account.

About formats

MJPEG (Motion JPEG) is a video compression format in which each frame is independently compressed as a separate JPEG image. Unlike interframe codecs that exploit temporal redundancy between successive frames, MJPEG treats every frame as a standalone photograph, applying the discrete cosine transform compression familiar from still image JPEG encoding. This approach dates back to 1992, coinciding with the establishment of the JPEG standard itself, and was widely adopted as one of the earliest practical methods for compressing digital video. The intraframe-only nature of MJPEG carries several practical benefits: any frame can be accessed and edited independently without decoding neighboring frames, making it exceptionally well-suited for video editing and applications requiring frame-accurate random access. MJPEG is commonly used in IP cameras, security surveillance systems, medical imaging, and industrial machine vision, where individual frame integrity and low processing latency outweigh the higher bandwidth requirements compared to modern interframe codecs. The format achieves typical compression ratios of 10:1 to 20:1 while maintaining good visual quality, though at significantly higher bit rates than temporal compression methods for equivalent quality. MJPEG streams can be delivered over HTTP, making them straightforward to implement in web-based monitoring applications, and the simplicity of the codec ensures reliable decoding even on resource-constrained embedded hardware.
Initial release: 1992
WTV (Windows Recorded TV Show) is a digital video recording format developed by Microsoft and introduced in July 2008 with the Windows Media Center TV Pack for Windows Vista. The format was designed to replace the earlier DVR-MS recording format used by Windows Media Center, offering a more capable container for recording live television broadcasts. WTV files store video in MPEG-2 or H.264 encoding alongside multiple audio tracks in AC-3 or MPEG audio format, along with closed caption data, electronic program guide metadata, and copy protection flags. The container uses an internal directory structure that supports time-shifting features, allowing Windows Media Center to record content while simultaneously enabling playback from the beginning of the recording. A rich metadata framework preserves detailed program information from the electronic program guide (EPG), including show title, episode description, genre, ratings, and original air date, making it easy to organize and browse recorded content. The format supports both standard definition and high definition recordings from digital cable, over-the-air ATSC, and ClearQAM tuner sources. WTV files are natively accessible through Windows Media Center and can be converted to the simpler DVR-MS format using built-in Windows tools. While Windows Media Center was discontinued after Windows 7 (with limited support in Windows 8), WTV files remain in personal media archives and can be processed by third-party video tools.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: July 16, 2008

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert MJPEG to WTV?

MJPEG files are extremely large due to frame-by-frame JPEG compression. Converting to WTV dramatically reduces file size with modern codecs.

How do I open a WTV file?

Windows Media Center and Windows Media Player with codec packs can play WTV recordings.

Will audio be preserved when converting?

Yes — the audio track from your MJPEG file is carried over into the WTV container during conversion automatically.

Does the conversion affect video quality?

You control the output settings. Choosing a high bitrate and matching resolution preserves quality close to the original MJPEG source.

Can I convert multiple MJPEG files at once?

Yes. Upload several MJPEG videos in a single batch and convert them all to WTV simultaneously — no need to process them one by one.