Convert PPT to PPM
Choose file to convert
You can effortlessly convert your ppt file to ppm, along with a multitude of other formats, using our complimentary online converter.
How to convert ppt to ppm?
Step 1
Upload an ppt-file
You can select the ppt file you wish to convert from your computer, Google Drive, Dropbox or just drag and drop it onto the page.
Step 2
Select "to ppm"
Choose ppm or any other of the 200+ supported formats that you wish to convert to.
Step 3
Download your ppm file
Please wait for the conversion to be completed, then click on the download button to get your converted file in the ppm format.
Best tool to convert ppt to ppm
Just drag and drop your ppt files onto the webpage, and you'll have the capability to convert them to ppm or over 250 different file formats, all without the need to register, provide an email address, or include a watermark.
Immediately upon uploading your ppt files, we delete them without delay. Converted files are then removed after 24 hours. Additionally, we ensure that all file transfers are secure through advanced SSL encryption.
There's no need to go through the inconvenience of installing any software. We conveniently handle all ppt to ppm conversions in the cloud, which implies that none of your computer's resources will be consumed in the process.
Microsoft PowerPoint
| Extension | .ppt |
| Category | 🔵 documents |
| Programs | 🔵 Apple Keynote 🔵 LibreOffice 🔵 OpenOffice |
| Main program | 🔵 Microsoft PowerPoint |
| Description | 🔵 A .ppt file is used for PowerPoint presentations. It is used it to share ideas via slides with text, images, anomations and videos. It was the main format until around 2000, then .pptx took over. |
| Technical details | 🔵 The '.ppt' means it's a PowerPoint slideshow, or basically a list of slides. You can put text, pictures, videos and sound in it, or even Excel spreadsheets. It's just a sequence of slides, but you can add links to jump around. It works best in Microsoft PowerPoint. You can open it in Google Slides or Keynote, but some things might look off. Microsoft used .ppt as the standard until 2007. After that, they switched to .pptx. Old .ppt files still open, but not all features will work. You can edit and present these files with transitions. The file size depends on what's inside. You can also lock it with a password. |
| Developer | 🔵 Microsoft |
| MIME type | 🔵 application/mspowerpoint 🔵 application/powerpoint 🔵 application/vnd.ms-powerpoint 🔵 application/x-mspowerpoint |
| Extension | .ppm |
| Category | 🔵 images |
| Programs | 🔵 Adobe Photoshop 🔵 Corel Draw 🔵 GIMP 🔵 Netpbm |
| Description | 🔵 The PPM format is a versatile way to store portable pixmap images. It's simple, yet effective in capturing color (PPM), grayscale (PGM), and black and white (PBM) images. It's a convenient tool for transferring bitmap image files of these three types across different platforms. The credit for creating the PPM format goes to Jeff Poskanzer. |
| Technical details | 🔵 A PPM file is made up of one or more PPM images lined up in sequence. There is no additional data, padding, or constraints before, during, or after the images. Each PPM image has a unique identifier known as a magic number, specifically "P6". This is followed by whitespace characters (spaces, TABs, CRs, and LFs) and the image width, expressed as ASCII characters in decimal form. Another ASCII decimal space follows this. The color value, or Maxval, within a PPM image is given in decimal form. It should be more than zero but less than 65536. A single whitespace character on a separate line follows the Maxval. The image is then made up of a raster of height rows, arranged in reverse order. Each row comprises width pixels, laid out from left to right. The samples in a PPM image consist of binary information, represented by one or two bytes. If the Maxval is less than 256, the sample is one byte. If it's more, it's two bytes with the first byte being the most significant. There is also an alternate version of the PPM format known as the straightforward format, but it's not commonly used. |
| Developer | 🔵 Jef Poskanzer |
| MIME type | 🔵 image/x-ppm 🔵 image/x?portable?pixmap |