What ChopKitty is

ChopKitty is a browser-based file compression and conversion tool built for people who want a faster workflow without giving their files to a remote service.

The core promise of the product is simple: keep file processing on the device, explain what each workflow actually does, and make everyday compression tasks easier for designers, marketers, students, and small teams.

Why it exists

Most free compression tools ask users to upload private files before they can even test the result. ChopKitty was built as a different kind of utility site, one where privacy is not a premium feature and common file tasks can happen directly in the browser.

That approach also changes the editorial side of the site. Instead of publishing one generic landing page for every keyword, ChopKitty tries to explain each workflow in plain language so visitors understand what happens to JPEGs, PNGs, WebPs, HEIC files, and PDFs before they use the tool.

What the site covers

The public site currently focuses on image compression, image format conversion, PDF image recompression, and image-to-PDF or PDF-to-image workflows.

  • Compress JPEG, PNG, WebP, and PDF files locally
  • Convert between common browser-friendly image formats
  • Handle HEIC and HEIF input from Apple devices
  • Export shareable PDFs from image inputs

How the publisher approaches content

ChopKitty is intended to be more than a shell around a utility widget. The site is being expanded with route-specific guides, workflow explanations, privacy notes, and methodology content so each page adds context and not just an upload box.

That work matters both for users and for quality review systems such as Search Console and AdSense. The goal is for the publisher content to stand on its own and clearly explain the purpose of the site.