Convert CIN to PCX
Convert CIN images to PCX format, edit and optimize images online and free.
The CIN file extension stands for Kodak Cineon Bitmap Image, a format developed by Kodak in 1992 to digitize film images for electronic compositing, manipulation, and enhancement. It stores a single frame from a motion picture or video data stream with 10-bit color depth per RGB channel. Although the Cineon System is now discontinued, the format is still used in visual effects and film restoration. CIN files can be opened and converted using applications like Adobe Photoshop and XnViewMP.
The PCX file extension, standing for PiCture eXchange, is a raster image format developed by ZSoft Corporation in 1985 for its PC Paintbrush software. It became one of the first widely accepted DOS imaging standards, supporting palette-indexed images from 2 to 256 colors and later true-color (24-bit) images. PCX files use RLE (Run-Length Encoding) compression, making them smaller in size. Although largely replaced by formats like BMP, JPEG, and PNG, PCX was pivotal in early computer graphics and is still supported by various image processing software.
Drag & drop any CIN file from your device or click the Choose File button to proceed.
Check the file preview quickly and use CIN to PCX tools if you need to change the conversion settings.
Let the file convert, then you can download your PCX file right afterward.
To change CIN format to PCX, upload your CIN file to proceed to the preview page. Use any available tools if you want to edit and manipulate your CIN file. Click on the convert button and wait for the convert to complete. Download the converted PCX file afterward.
Follow steps below if you have installed Vertopal CLI on your macOS system.
cd
to CIN file location or include path to your input file.Follow steps below if you have installed Vertopal CLI on your Windows system.
cd
to CIN file location or include path to your input file.Follow steps below if you have installed Vertopal CLI on your Linux system.
cd
to CIN file location or include path to your input file.