VOX to GSM Converter

Re-encode Dialogic VOX as GSM 06.10 telephony audio

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IVR to Mobile

Bridge Dialogic landline telephony and GSM mobile networks — two voice ecosystems connected.

Ultra-Compact

GSM at 13 kbps produces extremely small files. Your VOX recordings shrink for mobile delivery.

Browser-Based

No telephony tools needed. Convert VOX to GSM directly in the browser.

How to convert VOX to GSM

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

VOX is a headerless audio format built around Dialogic ADPCM encoding, widely adopted in telephony, interactive voice response (IVR) systems, and voice mail platforms since the 1980s. Each audio sample is compressed into 4 bits using an algorithm developed by Oki Electric and implemented in hardware on Dialogic Corporation's telephony interface cards. VOX files typically use a sampling rate of 6000 or 8000 Hz, producing extremely compact recordings optimized for speech intelligibility rather than musical fidelity. Because the format carries no header, playback software must know the sample rate and encoding parameters in advance — a trade-off that reduces overhead but demands careful file management. The primary advantage of VOX is storage efficiency: a one-minute voice recording at 8 kHz occupies roughly 240 KB, making it practical for systems storing thousands of prompts. Dialogic ADPCM conforms to the ITU-T G.726 standard, ensuring interoperability across telephony equipment from different vendors. Even as modern call centers migrate to IP-based systems with codecs like Opus, vast libraries of VOX recordings persist in legacy IVR deployments and compliance archives worldwide.
Initial release: 1983
GSM 06.10 (Full Rate) is the foundational speech codec of the Global System for Mobile Communications standard, ratified by ETSI in 1991 and deployed across hundreds of cellular networks worldwide. Operating at a fixed 13 kbit/s, the algorithm applies Regular Pulse Excitation with Long-Term Prediction (RPE-LTP) to compress 20 ms frames of 8 kHz mono speech into just 33 bytes each. This approach models the vocal tract as a linear predictive filter, encodes the excitation signal, and leverages pitch periodicity for further reduction — tuned to deliver intelligible voice under the bandwidth constraints of early digital mobile channels. The codec powers not only GSM telephony but also many VoIP applications, voicemail systems, and IVR platforms that benefit from its low bitrate. Three concrete advantages stand out. First, extraordinary compression: one minute of speech fits in roughly 100 KB, enabling efficient storage and transmission. Second, universal tooling — libraries such as libgsm and SoX handle encoding and decoding on every major platform. Third, a royalty-free patent landscape that has encouraged adoption across open-source telephony projects like Asterisk and FreeSWITCH.
Initial release: 1991

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert VOX to GSM?

GSM 06.10 is the global mobile voice codec. Converting VOX adapts landline IVR audio for mobile telephony systems.

What can open GSM files?

SoX, Audacity, and Asterisk PBX play GSM. The codec runs in billions of mobile phones.

Both VOX and GSM are voice codecs — how do they differ?

VOX uses OKI ADPCM for IVR; GSM 06.10 uses RPE-LTP for mobile networks. Different algorithms, different deployment contexts.

Is GSM quality acceptable?

At 13 kbps, GSM delivers intelligible speech. For telephony sources, quality is comparable to the original.

Can I use GSM in Asterisk?

Yes — Asterisk supports GSM as a native codec for voice processing.

VOX to GSM Quality Rating

5.0 (2 votes)
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