PPSX to YUV Converter

Export PPSX slides as raw YUV color component frames

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Broadcast Color Standard

YUV follows the CCIR 601 specification used across broadcast television — your PPSX slide colors are mapped into the industry-standard luminance-chrominance model.

Presentations into Video

Transform PPSX slides into raw YUV frames that drop directly into encoding pipelines, video compositors, or broadcast playout systems.

Fast Cloud Rendering

Rendering PPSX slides to raw YUV frames runs quickly on Convertio servers. No local video tools or color space converters needed — results are ready in seconds.

How to convert PPSX to YUV

1

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

2

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

3

Let the file convert and you can download your yuv 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
YUV is a raw pixel data format storing images in the Y'UV color model, where image data is separated into a luminance component (Y', representing brightness) and two chrominance components (U/Cb and V/Cr, representing color difference signals). The YUV color model originated with analog color television broadcasting — specifically the NTSC system adopted in 1953 and the PAL system in 1967 — where backward compatibility with existing black-and-white receivers required separating brightness from color information. In digital imaging, the ITU-R BT.601 standard (1982) formalized the digital YCbCr encoding derived from the analog YUV model, defining the conversion matrices and sample precision used by virtually all digital video and broadcast systems. YUV raw files contain no header, compression, or metadata — they are flat sequences of luminance and chrominance samples in a specified ordering (4:4:4, 4:2:2, 4:2:0, or other subsampling ratios), requiring external specification of dimensions, bit depth, and subsampling scheme. The 4:2:0 subsampling mode (where chrominance has half the horizontal and half the vertical resolution of luminance) is particularly common, used by H.264, H.265, AV1, and most consumer video codecs. One advantage is direct video pipeline compatibility: YUV data is the native input format for video encoders, hardware display controllers, and camera sensor ISPs, making raw YUV the most direct representation for frame-accurate video processing and analysis. The perceptual efficiency of the YUV color model is another fundamental strength — separating luma from chroma enables effective subsampling that halves or quarters the color data with minimal visible impact. YUV data is processed by FFmpeg, ImageMagick, and all video processing tools.
Developer: ITU-T (CCIR)
Initial release: 1982

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert PPSX to YUV?

YUV is the raw color format used in broadcast video and encoding pipelines. Converting PPSX to YUV lets you inject slide visuals directly into video production workflows.

How do I open YUV files?

FFplay, VLC (with raw input options), YUV Player Deluxe, and professional encoding tools open raw YUV when given the correct resolution and chroma format parameters.

What is CCIR 601?

CCIR 601 (now ITU-R BT.601) defines the standard for digital encoding of analog video — specifying how luminance and chrominance values are sampled and stored.

Are YUV files large?

Yes — YUV stores uncompressed raw pixel data. A single 1080p frame requires several megabytes. Files are intended for processing, not long-term storage or distribution.

Does YUV preserve slide colors accurately?

YUV separates luminance from color information. The conversion maps RGB slide colors to YUV space faithfully — standard practice in all broadcast video systems.

Is PPSX to YUV conversion free?

Yes — Convertio performs PPSX to YUV conversion for free. Premium plans unlock higher file size limits and priority processing queues.