Dynapik offers a free online tool to change image types - no need to download anything. It's quick and easy to use. You can change your PBM images to CUR format. This tool works for both professionals and casual users. Convert your images to CUR in seconds.
Portable Bitmap
The lowest common denominator of image formats.
PBM (Portable Bitmap) is the simplest format in the Netpbm suite, designed to represent monochrome (black and white) images. It uses a straightforward text-based (or simple binary) encoding where '1' represents black and '0' represents white (or vice versa depending on the viewer, though standard entails 1=black). It was designed to be easily emailed and processed by simple scripts.
There are two variants: P1 (ASCII) and P4 (Binary). ASCII P1: The file is human-readable text. A grid of 0s and 1s defines the image. Binary P4: The bits are packed into bytes for efficiency. The header simply states the magic number (P1 or P4) and the dimensions. There is no compression, no index, no palette.
Invented by Jef Poskanzer in the 1980s as a way to send bitmaps via email properly. It became the foundation of the 'pbmplus' (later 'netpbm') toolkit, which provided a standard way to convert between dozens of incompatible 80s file formats.
Microsoft Windows Cursor
The standard format for static mouse cursors on Microsoft Windows.
The CUR format is the standard file format for static mouse cursors in the Microsoft Windows operating system. It is structurally almost identical to the ICO (Icon) format, with one key difference: the header contains a defined 'hotspot'. The hotspot specifies the exact pixel coordinate (x, y) that registers the click, such as the tip of an arrow pointer.
A CUR file starts with a header similar to an ICO file, but the 'image type' field is set to 2 (Cursor) instead of 1 (Icon). For each image in the file (it can contain multiple sizes/depths), the directory entry stores the hotspot X and Y coordinates instead of the color planes/bpp fields found in ICOs. The image data itself is typically a BMP with a 1-bit AND mask for transparency, or a PNG in modern versions.
Introduced with Windows 1.0, the format has evolved alongside Windows. Originally supporting only monochrome, it grew to support 16 colors, 256 colors, and finally 32-bit alpha-blended cursors in Windows XP.
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