SHN to PVF Converter

Decode Shorten into Portable Voice Format online

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Telephony Audio

PVF serves phone systems and IVR — lossless SHN gives clean voice recordings for telephony use.

Web-Based

Create PVF files in your browser — no SoX or telephony SDKs needed.

Private Files

SHN uploads are erased immediately. PVF outputs are purged within 24 hours.

How to convert SHN to PVF

1

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

2

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

3

Let the file convert and you can download your pvf 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 While FLAC eventually superseded Shorten with better compression, seeking support, and embedded metadata, SHN retains historical importance and extensive live music archives in the format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
PVF (Portable Voice Format) is a simple audio file format designed for voice message storage in Linux-based telephony systems, most notably ISDN4Linux and its vbox voicemail application. The format emerged from the European ISDN ecosystem of the late 1990s, when Linux servers increasingly handled PBX and answering machine duties over digital phone lines. PVF files store raw signed 16-bit PCM samples at 8000 Hz mono, preceded by a minimal plain-text header specifying data format and byte ordering. This deliberate simplicity is one of the format's primary strengths — with no compression and a human-readable header, PVF files are trivially easy to parse, pipe, and manipulate using standard Unix tools. The 8 kHz rate matches the Nyquist requirement for telephone-bandwidth speech (300-3400 Hz), making PVF a natural intermediate format for voice processing pipelines. Another advantage is cross-architecture portability: the explicit byte-order declaration means PVF files move between big-endian and little-endian systems without ambiguity. The SoX audio toolkit provides native PVF read/write support, enabling straightforward conversion to modern formats.
Developer: ISDN4Linux Project
Initial release: 1997

Frequently Asked Questions

What is PVF?

Portable Voice Format stores raw voice data for telephony platforms and embedded voice processing systems.

Why convert SHN to PVF?

PBX and IVR systems may need PVF audio. Lossless SHN provides clean voice recordings for the encoding.

What processes PVF?

SoX, Asterisk PBX, and telephony development tools handle PVF audio for voice applications.

Is PVF lossy?

PVF stores uncompressed audio — converting from lossless SHN preserves full voice quality.

Is it secure?

SHN uploads are deleted immediately. PVF results are removed within 24 hours.