DSS to OGA Converter

Convert Olympus DSS dictation to OGA online

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Settings

The codec to encode the audio track. Codec "Without reencoding" copies the audio stream from the input file into output without re-encoding if possible.
Set the number of audio channels. This setting is most useful when downmixing channels (e.g., from 5.1 to stereo).
Set the sample rate of the audio. Music with a full spectrum (20 Hz — 20 kHz) requires values not lower than 44.1 kHz to achieve transparency. More info can be found on the wiki.

dss

DSS (Digital Speech Standard) is a proprietary voice recording format developed by Olympus, Philips, and Grundig in 1994 through the International Voice Association. Built for dictation workflows, DSS applies speech-optimized compression at very low bit rates — the original standard encodes at roughly 13.7 kbps, while DSS Pro reaches about 28 kbps with improved clarity. The codec concentrates its budget on frequency ranges characteristic of human speech rather than full-spectrum audio, producing exceptionally compact files. Professional recorders from Olympus and Philips use DSS natively, integrating with transcription software that supports priority flags, bookmarks, and author identification in file metadata. One advantage is file size efficiency: an hour of dictation occupies just 6-12 MB, practical for high-volume environments like hospitals, law firms, and courts. Built-in metadata enables seamless routing through transcription queues with automatic priority sorting. Although DSS is a closed format with playback limited to compatible software, its dominance in professional dictation ensures ongoing support from major transcription platforms.
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oga

OGA is the audio-only file extension within the Ogg container framework maintained by the Xiph.Org Foundation. While .ogg traditionally served as a catch-all extension for any Ogg-encapsulated stream, the introduction of .oga in 2007 brought clarity by explicitly signaling that a file contains only audio data. Under the hood, OGA files can carry audio encoded with Vorbis, FLAC, Speex, or Opus — the container is codec-agnostic, serving as a transport wrapper with support for chained logical bitstreams and granule-based seeking. One benefit of OGA is interoperability: applications that encounter the .oga extension can optimize for audio-only playback without probing for video tracks, resulting in faster load times and lower memory usage. Because the Ogg container and its associated codecs are entirely open-source and royalty-free, OGA avoids the patent licensing complexities that affect proprietary formats. The format supports Vorbis comment metadata for tagging artist, album, and track information in a standardized way. OGA plays natively in Firefox, Chromium-based browsers, VLC, and most Linux desktop environments, making it a practical choice for web audio distribution and archival workflows.
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Dictation to OGA

Free your DSS dictation recordings from proprietary Olympus/Philips software — convert to OGA for Linux and open-source audio.

No Dictation Software

Skip the Olympus DSS Player or Philips SpeechExec installation. Convert DSS to OGA directly in your browser.

Secure Processing

Uploaded DSS dictation files are deleted after conversion. Output files are purged from our servers within 24 hours.

How to convert DSS to OGA

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

DSS (Digital Speech Standard) is a proprietary voice recording format developed by Olympus, Philips, and Grundig in 1994 through the International Voice Association. Built for dictation workflows, DSS applies speech-optimized compression at very low bit rates — the original standard encodes at roughly 13.7 kbps, while DSS Pro reaches about 28 kbps with improved clarity. The codec concentrates its budget on frequency ranges characteristic of human speech rather than full-spectrum audio, producing exceptionally compact files. Professional recorders from Olympus and Philips use DSS natively, integrating with transcription software that supports priority flags, bookmarks, and author identification in file metadata. One advantage is file size efficiency: an hour of dictation occupies just 6-12 MB, practical for high-volume environments like hospitals, law firms, and courts. Built-in metadata enables seamless routing through transcription queues with automatic priority sorting. Although DSS is a closed format with playback limited to compatible software, its dominance in professional dictation ensures ongoing support from major transcription platforms.
Initial release: 1994
OGA is the audio-only file extension within the Ogg container framework maintained by the Xiph.Org Foundation. While .ogg traditionally served as a catch-all extension for any Ogg-encapsulated stream, the introduction of .oga in 2007 brought clarity by explicitly signaling that a file contains only audio data. Under the hood, OGA files can carry audio encoded with Vorbis, FLAC, Speex, or Opus — the container is codec-agnostic, serving as a transport wrapper with support for chained logical bitstreams and granule-based seeking. One benefit of OGA is interoperability: applications that encounter the .oga extension can optimize for audio-only playback without probing for video tracks, resulting in faster load times and lower memory usage. Because the Ogg container and its associated codecs are entirely open-source and royalty-free, OGA avoids the patent licensing complexities that affect proprietary formats. The format supports Vorbis comment metadata for tagging artist, album, and track information in a standardized way. OGA plays natively in Firefox, Chromium-based browsers, VLC, and most Linux desktop environments, making it a practical choice for web audio distribution and archival workflows.
Initial release: 2007

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DSS to OGA?

OGA provides audio-only Ogg container. Converting DSS dictation to OGA makes your voice recordings accessible for Linux and open-source audio.

What opens OGA files?

VLC, Rhythmbox, Linux players can open and play OGA files without additional codecs or configuration.

What is DSS format?

DSS (Digital Speech Standard) is a proprietary dictation format developed by Olympus and Philips for voice recorders used in medical, legal, and business transcription.

Will voice quality be preserved?

DSS is a speech-focused codec with limited bandwidth. The conversion transfers all voice clarity present in the DSS source to the OGA output.

Can I batch convert DSS files?

Upload multiple DSS dictation recordings and convert them all to OGA at once — efficient for processing large batches of voice files.