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Supports: ODD
This tool reads the image stored inside your .odd file and re-saves it as a standard JPG that opens on any phone, browser, or photo viewer. The .odd extension is used by more than one application, so xconvert handles it on the image side — it renders the picture rather than trying to reopen the original program. Files are uploaded over an encrypted connection, processed on our servers, and deleted automatically a few hours after conversion — no sign-up, no watermark, never shared or made public.
.odd file onto the page, or click "+ Add Files" to browse. Queue several at once and they convert with the same settings.| Property | What to expect |
|---|---|
| Compression | JPG is lossy (DCT-based), so each save discards some detail to shrink the file |
| Transparency | JPG has no alpha channel — every pixel is opaque, so any transparent area is flattened |
| Color depth | 8 bits per channel (24-bit color), the standard for photographic JPGs |
| Best for | Photos and continuous-tone images; sharp line art, diagrams, or text can show artifacts |
| Compatibility | Opens natively in every mainstream browser, OS, and image viewer |
It reads the picture inside the file and re-encodes it as a JPG — think of it as exporting the image, not reopening the source application. Because .odd is used by several unrelated programs, xconvert treats it on the image side rather than assuming one specific format. If your file isn't an image, the conversion won't produce a meaningful picture.
Some, yes. JPG uses lossy compression, so it trades a little detail for a much smaller file. At the Very High preset the loss is hard to see on photos. For the crispest result keep the preset high; to hit a size budget instead, switch to Specific file size and enter a target. In our testing, a typical photographic source at Very High produced a small JPG in a few seconds.
JPG cannot store transparency — it has no alpha channel, so every pixel must be opaque. Any see-through area in the source is flattened to a solid fill on export. If you need to keep transparency, convert to ODD to PNG or ODD to WebP instead, both of which preserve an alpha channel.
Yes. Choose Specific file size instead of a Quality Preset and enter a target in KB or MB, and the converter scales quality to fit. To compress JPGs you already have without re-rendering, run them through the Image Compressor.
OpenDocument Drawings use the .odg extension, not .odd. If your file is really an .odg, use ODG to JPG so it renders from the correct format. To turn the picture into a printable page instead of a flat image, see ODD to PDF.