1) Upload ODP file to convert
Drop files here, or Click to select
2) Set converting ODP to JPG options
3) Get converted file
Total Image Converter
JPEG, TIFF, PSD, PNG, etc.
Rotate Images
Resize Images
RAW photos
Watermarks
Clear interface
Command line💾 Upload Your File: Go to the site, click on «Upload File,» and select your ODP file.
✍️ Set Conversion Options: Choose JPG as the output format and adjust any additional options if needed.
Convert and Download: Click 👉«Download Converted File»👈 to get your JPG file.
| File extension | .ODP, .FODP |
| Category | Document File |
| Description | Established originally by Sun Microsystems ODP file format refers to presentations created in Open Office software version two and later. Such type of file contains variety of data such as texts, images, graphs, transitions between slides, etc. and serves for saving lecture materials, picture slide shows, and business presentations. Dedicated Microsoft users often receive these files, but can't open them, because by default Microsoft Power Point has no way to recognize the ODP format. |
| Associated programs | Corel WordPerfect KOffice Lotus Symphony NeoOffice OpenOffice Impress StarOffice |
| Developed by | Sun Microsystems and Oasis |
| MIME type | application/vnd.oasis.opendocument.presentation |
| Useful links | More detailed information on ODP files |
| Conversion type | ODP to JPG |
| File extension | .JPG, .JPEG, .JPE, .JFIF, .JFI |
| Category | Image File |
| Description | JPG is the file format for images made by digital cameras and spread throughout the world wide web. Saving in JPG format an image loses its quality, because of the size compression. But at the end you have a much smaller file easy to archive, send, and publish in the web. These are the cases when an image's size matters more than image's quality. Nonetheless, by using professional software you can select the compression degree and so affect the image's quality. |
| Associated programs | |
| Developed by | The JPEG Committee |
| MIME type | |
| Useful links | More detailed information on JPG files |
ODP (OpenDocument Presentation) is the open-standard format used by LibreOffice Impress, Apache OpenOffice, and other open-source presentation tools. ODP files require compatible presentation software to open; they cannot be viewed on most mobile devices, web platforms, or by recipients without LibreOffice installed. JPG is the universal photographic image format — supported by every device, browser, and application. Converting ODP to JPG renders each slide as a separate high-resolution JPEG image: recipients need no software, each slide can be shared individually, and the content embeds natively in web pages, emails, and documents. No LibreOffice installation required.
ODP (OpenDocument Presentation) is the ISO/IEC 26300-compliant open standard for presentation files, developed by OASIS and used by LibreOffice Impress and Apache OpenOffice. ODP is the open-source alternative to Microsoft's PPTX format, storing slides, layouts, images, and notes in an XML-based ZIP container.
| Property | ODP | JPG |
|---|---|---|
| Type | OpenDocument presentation (slides, notes, layouts) | Lossy-compressed raster image (single slide) |
| Application required | LibreOffice Impress or compatible software | Any image viewer, browser, or device |
| Rendering consistency | Varies by application and version | Pixel-identical on every device |
| Web embeddable | No (requires plugin or conversion) | Yes — native in all browsers |
| Mobile compatibility | Limited (varies by mobile app) | Native on all smartphones and tablets |
| Best for | Open-source presentation editing | Universal sharing, web, cross-platform viewing |
The converter opens the ODP ZIP container and processes each slide XML file in sequence. For each slide, all elements are rendered — text with embedded fonts, shapes, backgrounds, images, charts, and ODF drawing objects — using a rendering engine that interprets the OpenDocument Drawing specification. The rendered slide is rasterized at the specified output DPI against a canvas sized to the ODP slide dimensions. The full-color RGB pixel grid is then encoded into JPG using the standard DCT compression algorithm at high quality settings (minimizing visible artifacts while producing practical file sizes). Each slide produces a separate JPG file named sequentially (slide-001.jpg, slide-002.jpg, etc.), preserving the original slide order.