PIX to RGBO Converter

Free PIX to RGBO image conversion service

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Faithful Reproduction

Every pixel of your PIX image is carefully preserved during RGBO conversion. The output accurately represents the original content.

Any Device Works

Access the PIX to RGBO converter from your phone, tablet, or computer. A modern web browser is all you need on any platform.

Private and Secure

Your PIX files are deleted right after conversion, and RGBO outputs are erased within 24 hours. Your data remains entirely confidential.

How to convert PIX to RGBO

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

PIX is a raster image format originally developed by Alias Research (later Alias|Wavefront, then acquired by Autodesk) in the mid-1980s for use with their 3D animation and modeling software running on Silicon Graphics workstations. The format stores uncompressed 24-bit RGB image data in a straightforward scanline-by-scanline layout preceded by a minimal header containing the image width and height. PIX was the native output format of Alias's rendering engines, used to store individual frames of 3D animations and rendered stills from software that would eventually evolve into Maya, one of the most influential 3D content creation tools in entertainment history. The format's design reflected the priorities of high-end production rendering: raw speed for writing individual frames during batch renders, exact pixel fidelity with no compression artifacts, and compatibility with the hardware framebuffers used in professional compositing suites of the era. One advantage of PIX is its rendering pipeline heritage — the format can be read by tools throughout the VFX and animation industry, and legacy PIX sequences from Alias-era productions represent irreplaceable primary assets from foundational works in computer animation. The format's simplicity provides another practical benefit: with no compression overhead, metadata complexity, or container parsing required, PIX files can be read and written with minimal code, making them trivial to incorporate into custom rendering and compositing pipelines. PIX files are supported by ImageMagick, GIMP, XnView, and various professional compositing tools.
Developer: Alias Research
Initial release: 1985
RGBO is a raw pixel data format designation used by ImageMagick, the open-source image processing suite first released in 1990, representing images as a flat sequence of Red, Green, Blue, and Opacity (inverted alpha) sample values with no header, container, or compression. The RGBO channel ordering specifies that the fourth channel is opacity rather than alpha — where alpha represents transparency (0 = transparent, max = opaque), opacity represents the inverse (0 = opaque, max = transparent). This distinction matters in compositing pipelines where the mathematical convention for the fourth channel varies between systems: some compositing models work with alpha (transparency), while older conventions including portions of ImageMagick's internal processing historically used opacity. RGBO files contain raw sample data at a user-specified bit depth (8-bit, 16-bit, or floating-point per channel), with pixels stored in scanline order. Because there is no header, the image dimensions, bit depth, and endianness must be specified externally when reading the file — typically via ImageMagick command-line arguments. One advantage is direct compatibility with processing pipelines that use the opacity convention: RGBO eliminates the need for channel inversion when interfacing with systems that expect opacity rather than alpha, preventing subtle compositing errors that occur when transparency conventions are mixed. The format's raw-data nature provides another practical benefit — with no encoding overhead, RGBO data can be memory-mapped, processed with SIMD instructions, or piped between processes with minimal latency. RGBO is primarily used within ImageMagick processing chains and can be converted to any other format using ImageMagick's extensive format support.
Initial release: 1990

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert PIX to RGBO?

Most image tools cannot open PIX files directly. RGBO output lets you view, edit, and distribute images from early 3D animation and VFX easily.

What programs open RGBO files?

You can open RGBO files with any standard image viewer. Windows Photo Viewer, macOS Preview, GIMP, and web browsers all support RGBO.

What makes PIX files historically important?

PIX images come from Alias PowerAnimator, the software behind groundbreaking CGI in early blockbuster films. They represent a pivotal era in VFX.

What happens to uploaded files?

Your PIX files are processed on secure servers, then deleted automatically. Converted RGBO files are available for 24 hours, then erased.

Does converting PIX to RGBO lose quality?

Conversion preserves the quality present in the PIX original. Any limitations come from the source resolution, not from the conversion step.