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Tahuri GIF Tuhinga o mua JPEG

Tahurihia Tō GIF Tuhinga o mua JPEG kōnae ngawari

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Tukuatu ana

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Me pēhea te huri GIF Tuhinga o mua JPEG

Hipanga 1: Tukuatu tō GIF ngā kōnae mā te whakamahi i te pātene i runga ake nei, mā te tōia me te whakataka rānei.

Hipanga 2: Pāwhiritia te pātene 'Tahuri' hei tīmata i te tahuritanga.

Hipanga 3: Tikiake i tō mea kua tahurihia JPEG kōnae


GIF Tuhinga o mua JPEG Ngā Pātai Auau mō te Tahuritanga

How do I convert GIF to JPEG without losing image quality?
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Upload your GIF file, then our converter applies format-aware quality optimization for JPEG output. For lossless formats (PNG, TIFF, BMP) we preserve every pixel; for lossy formats (JPG, WebP) you can tune the quality factor before download.
Transparency survives when going to PNG, WebP, TIFF, GIF, or SVG. Converting to JPG flattens the alpha channel against a white background — if you need transparency, target a transparency-aware format instead of JPEG.
Embedded ICC color profiles are read from the source GIF and re-attached to the JPEG output where the format supports it (JPG, PNG, TIFF, WebP). Formats without profile support fall back to sRGB.
Camera EXIF (ISO, shutter, lens, GPS) is preserved by default during GIF → JPEG conversion when both formats support metadata. Use the privacy option to strip metadata before download if you want to share images without geolocation.
Yes — drag multiple GIF files into the upload zone and we queue them in parallel. Free users get 100MB per file; Premium has no per-file cap and runs more parallel workers, so a 200-image batch typically finishes in under two minutes.
For straightforward format conversion we run the same libpng / libjpeg-turbo / libwebp / ImageMagick pipelines a desktop editor uses, with the same quality. The difference is that desktop tools open one file at a time; we accept a batch and run them in parallel.
Default behaviour is 1:1 — your JPEG output has the same pixel dimensions as the source GIF. Use a separate /resize-image/ step after conversion if you need to downscale or upscale as part of the workflow.
For JPG / WebP, quality 75-85 typically gets the file 60-80% smaller than the source GIF with no visible difference at normal viewing distance. For lossless targets (PNG, TIFF), expect smaller savings — usually 5-30% via better deflate / LZW compression.
Yes — uploaded GIF files are processed in isolated workers and deleted within minutes. We never read, store, or share the pixel data. The full privacy policy and retention window are documented at /privacy/.
Yes for free up to 100MB. Premium handles larger inputs (300MB+) and exotic per-pixel depths (16-bit PNG, 32-bit float TIFF). The pipeline streams pixel rows, so memory use scales with the row count, not the total pixel count.
A GIF file with strong compression (e.g. heavily lossy JPG) often grows when re-encoded to a lossless JPEG (PNG, TIFF), and a high-bitrate lossless GIF often shrinks dramatically when going to JPG / WebP. The ratio depends on image content (photos compress differently from line art).
Yes. The conversion is a format change — copyright on the image content stays with you (or whoever held it on the source GIF). We add no watermark, no metadata stamp, and claim no licence over the output.

GIF

Ka tautokohia e ngā kōnae GIF te pakiwaituhi me te iti o ngā papatae tae, he tino pai mō ngā pakiwaituhi māmā, ngā meme, me ngā ata.

JPEG

Ka whakamahi a JPEG i te kōpeketanga ngaronga kua arotauhia mō ngā whakaahua, kia taurite ai te kounga me te rahi o te kōnae.


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