Image Converter
Convert JPG, PNG, WebP and AVIF directly in the browser with quality, size and background controls.
Open image toolHarbor Convert is a lightweight, international-facing utility site built around browser-first processing, formal multilingual structure and fast landing pages that feel credible from the first click.
The first release focuses on evergreen intent: image format conversion, text case cleanup and base-number conversion. Each tool is indexable, shareable and usable on mobile.
Convert JPG, PNG, WebP and AVIF directly in the browser with quality, size and background controls.
Open image toolSwitch between uppercase, lowercase, title case and sentence case for quick copy cleanup and publishing work.
Open text toolMove numbers between binary, octal, decimal and hexadecimal formats for engineering or learning workflows.
Open base toolInternational utility sites need more than translated copy. They need structure, trust cues and crawlable page relationships.
English lives at the root, Chinese lives under /zh/, and each equivalent page points to its counterpart with hreflang tags.
Privacy, terms, contact and sitemap pages are present from the first release, which helps users and search engines treat the site seriously.
These are strong second-wave categories for international intent without turning the first release into a bloated directory.
Merge, compress and convert PDFs with dedicated landing pages.
Video, audio and subtitle helpers once a server-side pipeline is ready.
JSON, Base64, URL and timestamp tools for evergreen technical search demand.
This first version is intentionally clean. It gives you a real global-facing foundation without pretending the product already supports every file type on the planet.
The current image converter runs in the browser and keeps files on-device during conversion. Future server-side tools should be labeled separately instead of hiding that distinction.
For a global launch, root-level English is the clearest default. Regional language versions can then live in dedicated folders like /zh/.
Yes. The site structure is reusable, so new tools can inherit the same metadata, language routing and visual system.