HCOM to NIST Converter

Move HCOM audio into NIST research audio format

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Standards-Grade Format

Convert HCOM to NIST — the audio format specified by the National Institute of Standards and Technology for research evaluation.

Research Compatible

NIST format integrates with speech evaluation tools, benchmark testing frameworks, and academic audio processing pipelines.

Secure Processing

Uploaded HCOM files are erased immediately. NIST results are automatically deleted within 24 hours.

How to convert HCOM to NIST

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

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
NIST SPHERE (SPeech HEader REsources) is a specialized audio file format created by the National Institute of Standards and Technology for speech research, particularly projects funded by DARPA. The format wraps raw audio samples with a structured ASCII header encoding metadata such as sample rate, channel count, encoding type, speaker demographics, and transcription annotations — making it ideal for distributing speech corpora. NIST files typically store uncompressed PCM or mu-law audio at telephone-quality sample rates (8 kHz or 16 kHz), though the container is flexible enough to hold various encodings. A key advantage is the rich self-documenting header that lets researchers embed detailed corpus metadata directly in the file, eliminating sidecar files. SPHERE has also become the de facto standard for major speech databases like TIMIT, Switchboard, and the Fisher corpus, ensuring broad recognition across academic and government labs. The open specification and availability of command-line tools (sphere, h_strip, w_decode) make it straightforward to convert, inspect, and process these files programmatically in speech processing pipelines.
Initial release: 1990

Frequently Asked Questions

What is NIST format?

NIST is an audio format used by the National Institute of Standards and Technology for speech evaluation, research, and benchmark testing.

How does NIST differ from SPH?

NIST and SPH (SPHERE) are closely related formats. Both use NIST headers with PCM audio, with minor structural differences.

Why convert HCOM to NIST?

For audio evaluation tasks, speech benchmarks, or research workflows that require NIST-formatted audio data input.

What software reads NIST?

SOX, NIST scoring tools, and speech recognition research frameworks like HTK and Kaldi support NIST audio files.

Is the conversion instant?

HCOM files are very compact. Conversion to NIST format finishes within seconds on our infrastructure.