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 PNG32 images to PALM format. This tool works for both professionals and casual users. Convert your images to PALM in seconds.
PNG-32 (32-bit RGBA)
The gold standard for web graphics requiring smooth, complex transparency.
PNG-32 is the most capable version of the PNG format commonly used on the web. It combines the 24-bit true color of PNG-24 with an additional 8-bit alpha channel, hence the name (24 + 8 = 32 bits). This alpha channel is the game-changer: it allows every single pixel to have its own level of opacity, from 0 (fully transparent) to 255 (fully opaque). This enables rich, complex visual effects like drop shadows, glows, glass-like translucency, and anti-aliased (smooth) edges that blend perfectly onto any background color. Whenever you see a high-quality logo with a transparent background or a complex UI overlay on a website, you are almost certainly looking at a PNG-32 image.
A PNG-32 image contains four channels: Red, Green, Blue, and Alpha (RGBA). Each channel is 8 bits. The RGB channels store the color information, while the Alpha channel stores the transparency map. This structure allows for 'variable transparency'. Unlike GIF, which is either 'on' or 'off', a PNG-32 pixel can be 50% transparent. This is essential for anti-aliasing—the technique of smoothing jagged edges by making the edge pixels semi-transparent. Without this, diagonal lines and curves look pixelated (aliased) when placed against a background.
Support for PNG-32's alpha transparency was the major hurdle in PNG's early adoption. While the format supported it from the start (1996), the dominant browser of the time, Internet Explorer 6, famously displayed transparent PNGs with a gray background. It wasn't until IE7 (2006) that native support arrived, finally allowing designers to move away from GIF for transparent graphics.
Palm Pixmap
The graphics format for Palm Pilot PDAs.
The Palm Pixmap format is the native bitmap resource used by Palm OS devices (like the Palm Pilot, Tungsten, and Treo). It was designed for the constraints of early handhelds: low memory, low CPU power, and limited screen depth (initially 1-bit, then 4-bit grayscale, then 8/16-bit color).
Palm images are usually stored inside a pdb (Palm Database) container file. The pixel data itself supports multiple compression types, primarily PackBits (RLE) and ScanLine. It handles transparency via a designated transparent index color. The format is tightly coupled with the Palm OS resource manager structure.
Debuted with the original Palm Pilot in 1996. As screen technology evolved, the format was extended to support color and high density (double density) screens on devices like the Sony Clie and Palm Tungsten.
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