SXW to PAL Converter

SXW to PAL — palette-based images from legacy documents

Drop files here. 1 GB maximum file size or Sign Up
to
Facebook Amazon Microsoft Tesla Nestle Walmart L'Oreal

Indexed Color Output

PAL stores images with palette-based color data — compact and efficient for document pages rendered from SXW files.

No Installation

Convert SXW to PAL entirely in your browser. No plugins, no desktop software — works on any operating system.

Cloud-Powered

Server-side processing handles the rendering and conversion. Your device does nothing except upload and download files.

How to convert SXW to PAL

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

SXW is the word processing document format used by StarOffice 6.0 and OpenOffice.org 1.0, developed by Sun Microsystems and released in 2002. The format was one of the first mainstream office document formats to adopt an XML-based architecture, packaging document content, styles, metadata, and embedded media in a ZIP archive — a structural approach that directly influenced the later OpenDocument Format (ODF). The content.xml file describes the document body using XML elements for paragraphs, headings, lists, tables, footnotes, and inline formatting, while styles.xml defines the styling rules and meta.xml carries document properties. SXW represented a significant milestone in open-source office software, demonstrating that a non-proprietary XML format could handle the full range of word processing features including change tracking, indexes, cross-references, and complex page layouts. One advantage was transparency and openness — the XML structure made document content inspectable, transformable, and processable using standard tools, a sharp contrast to the opaque binary formats dominant at the time. The format's role as a technological precursor to the ODF standard is another historical significance: the OASIS OpenDocument Technical Committee used the OpenOffice.org XML format (including SXW) as the starting point for developing ODF 1.0. While SXW was superseded by ODT with OpenOffice.org 2.0 in 2005, existing SXW documents can be opened by LibreOffice, Apache OpenOffice, and document conversion tools.
Developer: Sun Microsystems
Initial release: 2002
PAL is a 16-bit per pixel interleaved YUV image format that stores color information using a luminance-chrominance model rather than direct RGB values. Each pixel pair is packed into four bytes using the UYVY byte ordering — U (Cb), Y0, V (Cr), Y1 — where two adjacent pixels share a single set of chroma (color difference) samples while each retaining its own luminance (brightness) value. This 4:2:2 chroma subsampling halves the color resolution horizontally with negligible perceptual impact, since human vision is far more sensitive to brightness variations than color detail. The format traces its conceptual roots to analog broadcast television standards developed during the 1960s and 1970s, where separating luminance and chrominance enabled backward-compatible color transmission alongside existing monochrome signals. In digital imaging, 16-bit YUV serves as a common intermediate representation for video capture hardware, frame grabbers, and image processing pipelines that work in the YCbCr color space internally before converting to RGB for display. One advantage is bandwidth efficiency: at 16 bits per pixel, UYVY requires roughly two-thirds the data of uncompressed 24-bit RGB while preserving virtually identical perceived quality, making it well suited for high-throughput video capture and real-time image processing applications. The format's direct correspondence to how video hardware captures and outputs data provides another practical benefit — many capture cards and camera sensors natively produce UYVY data, so storing it in PAL form avoids an unnecessary color space conversion step that would add latency and introduce rounding artifacts.
Developer: ITU-T / Microsoft
Initial release: 1982

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SXW to PAL?

PAL is a palette-based image format used by specific imaging tools and retro applications that work with indexed color data.

What opens PAL files?

ImageMagick, specialized palette editors, and certain retro computing applications can read and process PAL format files.

Is quality preserved?

The page is rendered as an image first, then stored with palette-based colors. Text-heavy documents work particularly well.

Is this conversion free?

Standard SXW to PAL conversions are free on Convertio. Premium plans unlock more volume and faster processing speeds.

Can I use this from a tablet?

Yes — the converter runs in any browser on any device. No app download or account registration is needed to convert.

How fast does it process?

PAL files are compact. Most conversions from SXW finish in seconds using cloud processing without local device impact.