PPS to JPEG Converter

Render PPS slideshow slides as JPEG images online

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Universal Visual Format

JPEG is the most widely supported image format in existence. Your PPS slides become instantly viewable on any device or platform.

Cloud-Rendered, Device-Friendly

All slide rendering runs on servers — your phone or laptop handles only the upload and download, nothing computationally heavy.

Quality You Can Trust

PPS slide content — text, images, shapes, backgrounds — is captured at high resolution in the resulting JPEG output.

How to convert PPS to JPEG

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

PPS (PowerPoint Slideshow) is a binary presentation format from Microsoft that functions identically to PPT with one behavioral difference: double-clicking a PPS file launches it directly in slideshow (full-screen) mode rather than opening the editing interface. The format uses the same OLE2 compound document structure as PPT, storing slides, text, images, animations, transitions, speaker notes, and embedded objects in binary streams. PPS files are typically produced by saving a finished PPT presentation in slideshow format, signaling that the content is intended for viewing rather than editing — though the file can still be opened for editing through PowerPoint's File menu. The format gained widespread use in corporate environments for distributing ready-to-present slide decks, training materials, kiosk displays, and self-running presentations. One advantage is presentation-ready behavior — recipients can launch a PPS file and immediately begin presenting without navigating editing tools, reducing the chance of accidentally modifying content or revealing speaker notes. The auto-play capability is another strength for unattended scenarios: combined with automatic timing and looping features, PPS files power information kiosks, digital signage, and lobby displays that run continuously without operator interaction. While the newer PPSX format has superseded PPS for current workflows, the binary slideshow format remains encountered in archived corporate materials and legacy presentation libraries.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: 1995
JPEG is one of the most widely used image formats in computing, standardized by the Joint Photographic Experts Group and published as ISO/IEC 10918-1 in September 1992. The .jpeg extension is functionally identical to .jpg — both contain the same JFIF or Exif-wrapped JPEG compressed image data. The format applies lossy compression using the discrete cosine transform (DCT): images are divided into 8x8 pixel blocks, transformed into frequency coefficients, quantized to discard visually less significant information, and entropy-coded for storage. The quality-to-size tradeoff is user-selectable, with typical settings producing files 10-20 times smaller than uncompressed originals at visually acceptable quality. JPEG supports 8-bit grayscale and 24-bit color, with Exif metadata carrying camera settings, GPS coordinates, timestamps, and thumbnails. One advantage is absolute universality — JPEG is readable by every image viewer, web browser, operating system, camera, phone, and printer manufactured in the past three decades, making it the safest format for sharing photographic images with any recipient. The efficient compression of continuous-tone photographic content is another core strength: JPEG consistently produces compact files from camera sensors and real-world scenes where subtle color gradients dominate. While newer formats like WebP and AVIF achieve better compression ratios, JPEG's installed base is so vast that it remains the default output of digital cameras and the most common image format on the web.
Initial release: September 18, 1992

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert PPS to JPEG?

JPEG images work everywhere — embed them in emails, blog posts, or social feeds without requiring recipients to have presentation software installed.

How do I view JPEG images?

Every device handles JPEG natively. Phones, tablets, computers, and browsers all display JPEG images without additional software.

Does each slide produce one JPEG?

Yes — the converter renders each slide in your PPS as a separate JPEG image file, keeping the original presentation order.

Will complex slide graphics look correct in JPEG?

Charts, diagrams, layered shapes, and text boxes are all rasterized faithfully. The visual output matches what you see in the slideshow.

Is the PPS to JPEG conversion free?

Standard conversions are free of charge. Premium accounts offer larger capacity and batch processing for heavy workloads.

Can I use these JPEG images commercially?

The converter does not alter licensing — the images belong to you just as the original PPS content does.

PPS to JPEG Quality Rating

4.8 (328 votes)
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