PPSX to PICON Converter

Create personal icons from PPSX slides — free online

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Instant Thumbnails

Turn every PPSX slide into a tiny PICON icon — perfect for creating visual previews, file identifiers, or thumbnail indices of your presentations.

Near-Instant Processing

PICON files are minuscule. Converting even a large PPSX presentation to personal icons takes just seconds on Convertio servers.

Browser-Only Workflow

No icon editors or XPM tools needed. Convert PPSX to PICON entirely in your web browser on any operating system.

How to convert PPSX to PICON

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

PPSX (PowerPoint Slideshow XML) is the Open XML counterpart to the legacy PPS format, introduced by Microsoft with Office 2007. Like PPTX, a PPSX file is a ZIP archive containing XML parts that describe slides, layouts, themes, and media assets according to the Office Open XML specification. The distinguishing characteristic is behavioral: opening a PPSX file launches the presentation directly in full-screen slideshow mode, bypassing the editing environment. This makes PPSX the preferred format for distributing finalized presentations where the audience should experience the content as a seamless visual narrative without exposure to the editing interface, slide sorter, or speaker notes panel. PPSX files support every visual feature available in PPTX including transitions, animations, embedded video and audio, hyperlinks, SmartArt, charts, and custom slide timings. One advantage is streamlined delivery — a PPSX file attached to an email or shared via a link opens as a polished presentation with a single click, requiring no instruction to the recipient. The XML-based foundation provides another benefit: PPSX files are typically much smaller than equivalent PPS files due to built-in ZIP compression, and their contents can be inspected or modified programmatically using standard XML tools. The format is supported for playback in PowerPoint, LibreOffice Impress, Google Slides (after upload), and various mobile presentation apps, ensuring broad cross-platform reach for distributed slide decks.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: January 30, 2007
PICON (Personal Icon) is a small-format image type used in the X Window System ecosystem, developed by Steve Kinzler at Indiana University around 1990 as part of the picons (personal icons) database project. Picons are small, typically 48x48 pixel, color images used as visual identifiers for people, organizations, domains, and Usenet newsgroups in Unix mail readers, news readers, and other communication tools. The picon format is essentially an XPM (X PixMap) image stored with specific naming conventions and directory structures that allow software to look up the appropriate icon based on email address, domain name, or newsgroup name. The picons database organized thousands of these small images in a hierarchical directory structure keyed by domain name components (e.g., faces/com/example/user.xpm), enabling mail clients like exmstrstrstr and faces to automatically display a sender's photo or organizational logo alongside their messages. The system predated the modern concept of contact photos and avatars by more than a decade. One advantage is the system's pioneering role in visual identity for electronic communication: picons introduced the idea that email and Usenet messages should display a visual representation of the sender — a concept that eventually became standard in every modern email client, messaging app, and social media platform. The XPM-based format ensures that picons are displayable on any system with X Window libraries. Picon images are supported by ImageMagick, GIMP, and X Window display utilities, and the historical picons database remains archived online at Indiana University.
Developer: Steve Kinzler
Initial release: 1990

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert PPSX to PICON?

PICON creates tiny icon-sized thumbnails from your slides. Useful for generating visual identifiers, file previews, or miniature representations of presentations.

How do I open PICON files?

ImageMagick reads and converts PICON images. XPM-compatible editors and icon management tools also handle the format since PICON is XPM-based.

How large are PICON images?

PICON images are very small — typically a few dozen pixels wide. They are meant as compact visual identifiers, not full-resolution images.

Is PICON related to XPM?

Yes — PICON is essentially a small XPM (X PixMap) image. It uses the same text-based pixel format but at icon scale, making it human-readable.

Will complex slide content be recognizable?

At icon scale, fine details are lost. Bold colors and simple shapes translate best — think of PICON as a visual fingerprint rather than a detailed preview.

Is PPSX to PICON conversion free?

Yes — Convertio offers this conversion at no cost. Premium plans add capacity for batch conversions and larger files.