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RLE to DJVU Converter

Transform RLE raster data into DJVU documents online

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Research Data Access

Utah RLE images from early CG research become viewable again when converted to DJVU — no specialized toolkit needed.

Any Device Works

Convert RLE to DJVU from a desktop, laptop, tablet, or phone. Any device with a modern browser and internet connection works.

Browser-Based Tool

No downloads or plugins needed — convert RLE to DJVU directly in your web browser on any operating system or device.

How to convert RLE to DJVU

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

RLE (Run-Length Encoded) in the context of the Utah RLE format refers to a raster image file format developed by Spencer W. Thomas at the University of Utah's Computer Science Department around 1983, as part of the Utah Raster Toolkit. The format stores images using a scanline-oriented run-length encoding scheme that compresses sequences of identical pixel values into count-value pairs, achieving good compression ratios for images with large areas of solid color — typical of computer-generated graphics and rendered scenes common in computer science research at the time. Utah RLE supports 1 to 255 color channels per pixel, with 8 bits per channel, and includes a header specifying image dimensions, number of channels, background color, and an optional color map. The format accommodates alpha channel data as an additional channel, and empty scanlines (matching the background color) can be omitted entirely for further compression. The Utah Raster Toolkit provided a suite of Unix command-line tools for manipulating RLE images — operations like compositing, scaling, rotating, color manipulation, and format conversion — establishing a software paradigm later echoed by Netpbm and ImageMagick. One advantage is the format's foundational role in computer graphics: the Utah Raster Toolkit and its RLE format emerged from the same research environment that produced the Phong shading model, Gouraud shading, and the teapot — and much of the early computer graphics research output was stored in this format. The format is supported by ImageMagick, GIMP, and various legacy graphics tools.
Initial release: 1983
DjVu (pronounced "deja vu") is a document format developed at AT&T Labs by Yann LeCun, Leon Bottou, Patrick Haffner, and Paul Howard, first released in 1996. The format was specifically designed for storing scanned documents and images at very high compression ratios while maintaining visual quality suitable for on-screen reading. DjVu achieves this through a layered approach: the document image is separated into a foreground layer (text and line art at full resolution), a background layer (photographs and textures at reduced resolution), and a mask layer that determines which layer is visible at each pixel. This separation, combined with purpose-built compression algorithms for each layer type, typically produces files 5-10 times smaller than equivalent JPEG or PDF scans. One advantage is exceptional compression on scanned pages — a 300 DPI color scan that might occupy 25 MB as TIFF or 500 KB as JPEG typically compresses to 40-80 KB in DjVu while preserving legible text. The progressive rendering model is another strength: DjVu files stream efficiently over networks, displaying a readable low-resolution version almost immediately while progressively refining to full quality. The format supports multi-page documents, embedded text layers for searchability, hyperlinks, annotations, and a shared dictionary mechanism that further compresses collections of similar pages. DjVu is widely used by libraries and archives for digitized historical documents and manuscripts.
Developer: AT&T Labs
Initial release: 1996

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert RLE to DJVU?

The Utah RLE format served early CG research but is now obsolete. Converting to DJVU safeguards those images for the future.

What programs can open DJVU?

WinDjView, DjView, Evince, Okular, and web-based viewers display DjVu. Mobile apps like EBookDroid also support this format.

How accurate is RLE to DJVU conversion?

Some compression artifacts are possible since DJVU is a lossy format. Choosing maximum quality preserves visual fidelity as closely as possible.

How quickly can I convert RLE to DJVU?

The process is fast — cloud-based processing handles RLE to DJVU conversion in seconds for standard-sized images, even on slower connections.

Does Convertio support batch RLE to DJVU conversion?

Absolutely. Add several RLE images at once, set DJVU as the output, and the converter processes them all in parallel for maximum efficiency.