XVID to CAF Converter

Switch from XVID to CAF effortlessly 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.

xvid

Xvid is an open-source video codec that implements the MPEG-4 Part 2 Advanced Simple Profile standard, developed and maintained by volunteer programmers under the GNU GPL license. The project originated in 2001 as a fork of the OpenDivX codebase after DivX, Inc. closed the source of their codec, and the original name is DivX spelled backwards as a nod to this history. Xvid achieved widespread adoption in the early-to-mid 2000s as a free alternative to the commercial DivX codec, offering comparable or sometimes superior compression quality without any licensing costs. The codec excels at compressing full-length video into remarkably small files while preserving good visual quality, using techniques such as adaptive quantization, quarter-pixel motion compensation, global and local motion estimation, and custom quantization matrices. Xvid-encoded video is typically stored in AVI containers, though it can also be wrapped in MKV, MP4, and other formats. The codec gained certification for playback on many standalone DVD players and media devices that supported DivX playback, since both codecs share the underlying MPEG-4 ASP standard. Cross-platform availability covering Windows, Linux, macOS, and other operating systems, combined with a completely free and open-source nature, made Xvid a cornerstone of community-driven video encoding. While H.264 and newer codecs have largely replaced MPEG-4 ASP for new encoding, Xvid remains in use for compatibility with older hardware and in legacy media collections.
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caf

CAF (Core Audio Format) is a flexible audio container developed by Apple and introduced with Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger in 2005. Built to overcome limitations of older formats, CAF eliminates the 4 GB file size ceiling that constrains WAV and AIFF, theoretically supporting unlimited length. The container accommodates virtually any codec — AAC, ALAC, MP3, linear PCM, IMA ADPCM, and more — within a unified wrapper. Its chunk-based architecture stores audio alongside rich metadata including channel layouts, marker regions, annotations, and MIDI data. A defining advantage is handling extremely long recordings: broadcasters and field recordists can capture hours of continuous audio without size boundaries. Flexible codec support is another strength, as one container works whether the content is high-resolution 24-bit/192 kHz lossless audio or compressed speech. Apple's Core Audio framework provides native support on macOS and iOS, ensuring low-latency playback in professional applications like Logic Pro and Final Cut Pro. For Apple ecosystem workflows requiring both versatility and scale, CAF is an exceptionally capable choice.
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Rapid Processing

Converting XVID to CAF is fast — cloud servers handle the heavy lifting so you get results in moments.

Data Safety First

Files are processed securely and deleted after conversion. Nothing lingers on servers — your privacy is fully protected.

Cloud-Powered Engine

The entire conversion runs on remote servers — your device stays fast and unburdened during the XVID to CAF process.

How to convert XVID to CAF

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

Xvid is an open-source video codec that implements the MPEG-4 Part 2 Advanced Simple Profile standard, developed and maintained by volunteer programmers under the GNU GPL license. The project originated in 2001 as a fork of the OpenDivX codebase after DivX, Inc. closed the source of their codec, and the original name is DivX spelled backwards as a nod to this history. Xvid achieved widespread adoption in the early-to-mid 2000s as a free alternative to the commercial DivX codec, offering comparable or sometimes superior compression quality without any licensing costs. The codec excels at compressing full-length video into remarkably small files while preserving good visual quality, using techniques such as adaptive quantization, quarter-pixel motion compensation, global and local motion estimation, and custom quantization matrices. Xvid-encoded video is typically stored in AVI containers, though it can also be wrapped in MKV, MP4, and other formats. The codec gained certification for playback on many standalone DVD players and media devices that supported DivX playback, since both codecs share the underlying MPEG-4 ASP standard. Cross-platform availability covering Windows, Linux, macOS, and other operating systems, combined with a completely free and open-source nature, made Xvid a cornerstone of community-driven video encoding. While H.264 and newer codecs have largely replaced MPEG-4 ASP for new encoding, Xvid remains in use for compatibility with older hardware and in legacy media collections.
Developer: Xvid Team
Initial release: 2001
CAF (Core Audio Format) is a flexible audio container developed by Apple and introduced with Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger in 2005. Built to overcome limitations of older formats, CAF eliminates the 4 GB file size ceiling that constrains WAV and AIFF, theoretically supporting unlimited length. The container accommodates virtually any codec — AAC, ALAC, MP3, linear PCM, IMA ADPCM, and more — within a unified wrapper. Its chunk-based architecture stores audio alongside rich metadata including channel layouts, marker regions, annotations, and MIDI data. A defining advantage is handling extremely long recordings: broadcasters and field recordists can capture hours of continuous audio without size boundaries. Flexible codec support is another strength, as one container works whether the content is high-resolution 24-bit/192 kHz lossless audio or compressed speech. Apple's Core Audio framework provides native support on macOS and iOS, ensuring low-latency playback in professional applications like Logic Pro and Final Cut Pro. For Apple ecosystem workflows requiring both versatility and scale, CAF is an exceptionally capable choice.
Developer: Apple Inc.
Initial release: 2005

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert XVID to CAF?

XVID, an older open-source MPEG-4 codec, can be hard to play across platforms. Switching to CAF gives you professional macOS audio workflows.

How do I open a CAF file?

CAF opens easily in QuickTime, Logic Pro, or VLC on any platform. Just double-click the file or drag it into the player of your choice.

What devices can play CAF?

CAF playback requires compatible software on your desktop or laptop. Check the recommended apps above to find the right player for your system.

Is any software installation required?

No. The entire XVID to CAF conversion runs in your browser via convertio.tools. Nothing to download or install on your machine.

Can I convert multiple XVID to CAF at once?

Absolutely. Upload several XVID files and convert them all to CAF in one batch — each processes independently.