RLE to ICO Converter

Export Utah RLE images to ICO format online for free

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Quick Turnaround

Most RLE files convert to ICO within moments. Server-side processing ensures speed regardless of your device capabilities.

Cloud Processing

Conversion runs on remote servers, so your computer stays fast. Even large RLE images are handled without slowing your device.

Academic Archive

Preserve pioneering computer graphics imagery by converting RLE rasters to ICO — accessible to researchers and historians alike.

How to convert RLE to ICO

1

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

2

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

3

Let the file convert and you can download your ico 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
ICO is the icon file format for Microsoft Windows, introduced with Windows 1.0 in 1985 and serving as the standard container for application icons, file type icons, and shortcut icons throughout the Windows ecosystem. An ICO file bundles multiple image variants within a single container — each at different sizes (16x16, 32x32, 48x48, 256x256, and others) and color depths (4-bit, 8-bit, 24-bit, 32-bit with alpha) — allowing Windows to select the most appropriate image for each display context, from tiny taskbar buttons to large desktop icons. The container structure consists of an ICONDIR header, an array of ICONDIRENTRY records describing each variant, and the image data itself. Since Windows Vista, ICO files support embedded PNG-compressed images for the larger sizes (typically 256x256), dramatically reducing file size while maintaining quality with full alpha transparency. One advantage is automatic size adaptation — Windows pulls the optimal resolution from the ICO container for each context (Explorer list view, desktop tile, Alt-Tab preview), ensuring crisp display without the application managing separate image files. The format's operating system-level integration is another core strength: ICO files serve as the identity mechanism for executables, file associations, and shortcuts across all Windows versions, and web browsers use favicon.ico for website identity in tabs and bookmarks. ICO creation and editing is supported by image editors like GIMP, Inkscape, and dedicated icon tools, and the format remains essential for Windows application development.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: 1985

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert RLE to ICO?

RLE raster images from the Utah toolkit are hard to open today. A ICO conversion unlocks them for modern viewers and editing software.

What programs can open ICO?

Web browsers render ICO as favicons. IrfanView, GIMP, and dedicated icon editors open them for viewing and editing on desktop.

Does RLE to ICO preserve quality?

The conversion keeps your image data intact — ICO does not introduce compression artifacts, ensuring the output matches the original closely.

Is RLE to ICO conversion fast?

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

Can I convert multiple RLE images at once?

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

Can I convert old CG research imagery?

Yes — if your files are in Utah RLE format, upload them to Convertio and convert to ICO for modern viewing and analysis.

RLE to ICO Quality Rating

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