Download webp as gif opera
Because of compact file size and support for animations, GIF became hugely popular on the web. The difference between these digital image formats is also compatibility with browsers, image editing apps, etc.
Also, it offers a multitude of options and supports various image formats. In the Export As dialog box, change the name of your gif file and extension. You can also choose a destination folder for your GIF file. Upon pressing Export, another dialog box will open with few more options for GIF animations, comments, etc. Once again, press an Export button, and your GIF file will generate. With Paint, you can easily do this conversion in few simple steps:. Warnings about losing transparency and quality will appear.
The disadvantage of using Paint for this conversion is that you can only convert one WEBP file at a time. While I cannot say exactly what is happening behind the scenes, the author notes that it converts the image on the fly.
There is no mentioning of a remote service that it uses for that which means it is not really clear how the conversion is handled in the background. Not all web browsers support the webp format, and most web services that use the webp format fall back to png or jpg images instead when such a browser is used.
You can run Firefox or Internet Explorer instead for all your image downloading needs, so that the images are automatically saved as png or jpg images. If you rely on Chrome, try the User Agent Switcher extension instead which fakes the browser you are using. Select the user agent of a browser that does not support webp, and you should get the same png or jpg delivery that those browsers get.
Now I can skip that step. There are many way to skin a cat. Just my opinion, mind you. Gregg, I think it depends on how often you save webp images to your system. If you do it regularly, you may fare better with the extension or a local video converter. I tried a User-Agent Switcher extension on Opera and no matter what I set it to, it still wants to save images from certain websites as. If I manually save them, it offers the proper.
Any ideas? Interestingly, you can right click and rename the file, just deleting. Pain to do each one, but it works. Actually this does not work. It indeed renames the file but still saves in webp format. Totally useless advice. The fundamental problem is that Google is forcing webp to users. One more option: If the URL of the webp image ends with -rw or -rw-no, just delete those final characters and Chrome will reload the image in its original jpg or png format.
One other option: If the URL of the webp image ends with -rw or -rw-no, just delete those final characters and Chrome will reload the image in the original jpg or png format. The PNG app doesn not work. I just get a message on my download that it failed due to the system being busy. Admittedly I am not computer savvy. Changing the extension does not work. Please — someone help me disable this nonsense!!! After the latest Firefox update, it is forcing my image downloads into this format, and I cannot see their thumbnails in File Explorer or edit them, or even open them on my home computer.
Also Chrome has extensions to save images as jpgs and pngs so you can just bypass all the webp bs. Does not work on a different browser. Tried with Firefox with the same results. Safari on Mac works great. No Webp. It converts to png by default, but you can specify different formats.
I made a Hazel rule on my Mac that automatically converts downloaded webp image to png format. The only reason I can figure is that for some reason either against my preference settings or I clicked something by mistake around that date my Firefox updated. Notice how we didn t specify the file extension for the output image? The full documentation can is on the Google WebP website. Their file sizes are just too big. The whole idea behind a jpeg. That is why it can compress an image from an eps.
I also have the option of using the Grab software that came with my Mac to do a kind of screensave that I can control the cropping on. This saves as a tiff, then I use Photoshop to convert the tiff to a jpeg or whatever format I choose.
At the moment, I think there's only one website I frequent that has been displaying files with a webp format in the name and only started this recently. So it's not a common problem with all sites I visit that have images or video clips.
However, I've noticed there are sites like twitter and instagram, I think, that control images to prevent visitors from dragging the images to your desktop or doing a right click to save, etc. I understand the importance of protecting people's images.
But of course software like Grab can still save these images and convert them easily enough. I don't think you're understanding the issue. The only site I've been on that displays images that download with a webp file name is programmed to add that appended webp.
It's not Firefox that's to blame. I have not experienced Firebox's browser adding a webp to a file name on any other sites, so it seems to be something unique to a single site I was referring to. I just wondered originally if Firefox had an easy add-on that would automatically convert the webp files to jpeg, gif or mpeg, for example, so my computer would read them normally. My computer and software programs I use don't recognize a webp file name.
If there are any you feel confident enough to recommend by name, that probably would be helpful to other users who find this thread. I found many conversion sites, but the ones I've used successfully so far include convertio. It seems to vary, also, in how many formats they do conversions between. I'd welcome feedback from others who try out the conversion sites or software programs, especially software that is Mac compatible or can be used in connection with Firefox for Mac versions.
I have to concur with Gelio on this one. I encounter this problem all the time, and its driving me to another browser. Here's a practical example of the problem at least as far as he and I see it. If i go to this site: hamilton. And i right click and save the main image using firefox, i end up with a webp image not recognised by windows photo viewer, photoshop etc. I have tried changing config settings per other articles, but it hasnt made a difference.
More recently, I created a new extension that removes webP from the list of formats Firefox tells sites that it wants. This may reduce the problem enough for you to stick with Firefox, if you want to give it a try:. Thanks jscher, your extension is simple but excellent. Its my preferred solution for sure, although it doesn't work on all sites. That is pretty lame and a waste of time. Why should I not just start using Internet Explorer instead of Firefox?
Even Chrome allows me to save a jpg as a jpg Search Support Search. Learn More. Unfortunately, the only way I know to ''reliably'' do that is to use a different search engine.
0コメント