AAC to HCOM Converter

Convert AAC audio to Macintosh HCOM format online

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Classic Mac Audio

Produce HCOM files from your AAC audio — the Huffman-compressed format native to early Macintosh systems.

No Emulators Needed

Convert AAC to HCOM entirely in your browser — no Mac emulator or vintage software required for the conversion.

Cloud-Powered

All encoding runs on our servers, keeping your device free from any legacy software dependencies.

How to convert AAC to HCOM

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose hcom or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your hcom file right afterwards

About formats

AAC (Advanced Audio Coding) is the successor to MP3, standardized by ISO/IEC as part of the MPEG-2 and later MPEG-4 specifications. Designed collaboratively by Fraunhofer, Dolby, Sony, Nokia, and AT&T, AAC delivers superior sound quality at equivalent or lower bit rates — a 96 kbps AAC stream generally matches a 128 kbps MP3 file in perceptual quality. The codec leverages a modified discrete cosine transform combined with advanced psychoacoustic modeling and temporal noise shaping. AAC serves as the default audio format for Apple's ecosystem (iTunes, iPhone, iPad), YouTube, and many streaming services. Its first advantage is excellent compression efficiency — high-fidelity audio using significantly less storage and bandwidth. Second, the format supports sample rates from 8 kHz to 96 kHz and up to 48 channels, suiting everything from voice calls to surround sound. Third, broad industry adoption by Apple and others ensures that virtually every modern device, browser, and media player handles AAC content natively without additional plugins.
Initial release: 1997
HCOM is a Huffman-coded audio format from the early Macintosh era, designed to shrink digitized sound for distribution on floppy disks and bulletin board systems when storage was precious and modems were slow. The encoder takes 8-bit unsigned PCM input, computes a frequency table of sample-delta values, and builds an optimal Huffman tree that replaces common deltas with short bit sequences. Compression ratios of 2:1 or better were typical for speech recordings, a meaningful saving when a 3.5-inch floppy held only 800 KB. Files were distributed as Macintosh resource forks and played through utilities like SoundApp and the BinHex ecosystem that defined Mac software exchange in the late 1980s. The format supported sample rates up to 22.255 kHz, matching the output capabilities of original Macintosh sound hardware. Tools such as SoX retain HCOM decoding support, ensuring that archived recordings remain accessible decades later. HCOM holds three practical advantages for preservation work: lossless compression that recovers the original samples exactly, a self-contained Huffman table embedded in each file for dependency-free decoding, and historical prevalence across thousands of vintage Mac sound archives.
Developer: Apple Computer
Initial release: 1985

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert AAC to HCOM?

HCOM is a vintage Macintosh audio format using Huffman compression — needed for classic Mac projects and HyperCard multimedia stacks.

What plays HCOM files?

SoX and classic Macintosh emulators (like Mini vMac, Basilisk II) can handle HCOM audio files.

Is HCOM still used?

Only in retro Mac computing. HCOM was common on early Macintosh systems but has been superseded by modern formats.

Does HCOM compress audio?

Yes — HCOM uses Huffman coding to compress audio data, making it more compact than raw PCM.

Can I convert many files at once?

Upload a batch of AAC files and convert them all to HCOM simultaneously.

AAC to HCOM Quality Rating

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