SHN to NIST Converter

Encode Shorten audio as NIST evaluation online

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Specialized Output

Generate NIST from pristine lossless SHN source — clean audio for your specific application needs.

Online Processing

No specialized tools needed — our servers handle the entire SHN to NIST conversion through your browser.

Secure Files

SHN uploads are erased immediately. NIST outputs are purged from servers within 24 hours.

How to convert SHN 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

Shorten (SHN) is a lossless audio compression codec created by Tony Robinson at SoftSound and first published in 1993, making it one of the earliest practical lossless compressors. The algorithm uses linear prediction to estimate each sample from predecessors, then encodes residuals with Huffman or Golomb-Rice codes. Compression ratios typically fall between 2:1 and 3:1, with the guarantee that decoded output is bit-identical to the original. Shorten gained cultural significance in the late 1990s as the preferred format for trading live concert recordings online — communities like etree.org built entire distribution networks around SHN files, and bands like the Grateful Dead and Phish tacitly endorsed the practice. One advantage was the format's simplicity: encoding and decoding ran fast even on modest Pentium-era hardware. Another strength was deterministic output — the same input always produced the same bytes, making checksums reliable for verifying integrity across thousands of traders. While FLAC eventually superseded Shorten with better compression, seeking support, and embedded metadata, SHN retains historical importance and extensive live music archives in the format still circulate today.
Initial release: 1993
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?

NIST is a specialized audio format — the audio specification from NIST for speech recognition evaluation datasets.

Why convert SHN to NIST?

Specific applications require NIST files. Lossless SHN provides clean, artifact-free source material for the conversion.

What handles NIST?

Specialized tools, SoX, and targeted professional software support NIST audio processing and playback.

Is quality maintained?

Starting from lossless SHN ensures no prior compression artifacts — output quality depends on NIST format capabilities.

Is the conversion secure?

SHN uploads are deleted immediately after conversion. NIST results are removed from servers within 24 hours.