MP2 to NIST Converter

Export MP2 broadcast audio as professional NIST online

Drop files here. 1 GB maximum file size or Sign Up
to
Facebook Amazon Microsoft Tesla Nestle Walmart L'Oreal

MP2 to NIST Made Easy

Go from MP2 to NIST with a few clicks. Upload, select the output format, and download your converted audio.

Cloud-Based Engine

Conversion runs on our servers, so your device stays fast and responsive. No CPU load or disk space consumed locally.

Custom Parameters

Adjust sample rate, bit depth, channels, and codec settings to shape the output audio exactly how you need it.

How to convert MP2 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

MP2 (MPEG-1 Audio Layer II), also known by its original project name MUSICAM, is a perceptual audio codec standardized as part of ISO/IEC 11172-3 in 1993. While its successor MP3 captured the consumer spotlight, MP2 carved out a durable niche in professional broadcasting that it holds to this day. The codec splits audio into 32 sub-bands via a polyphase filter bank, applies a psychoacoustic model to determine masking thresholds, then quantizes and Huffman-codes each sub-band accordingly. Typical broadcast deployments use 192-384 kbps for stereo, yielding transparent quality with lower encoder complexity and better error resilience than Layer III. These properties explain why DVB television, DAB digital radio, and the HDV camcorder standard all mandate or prefer MP2. Encoder latency is shorter too, an important trait for live broadcasting where lip-sync matters. Three advantages keep MP2 relevant decades after standardization: graceful degradation under transmission errors vital for over-the-air signals, minimal encoding delay that suits real-time broadcast chains, and entrenched regulatory acceptance across European and Asian broadcast frameworks.
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

Why convert MP2 to NIST?

MP2 broadcast recordings can be re-encoded as NIST for integration into studio, research, or academic audio pipelines.

What programs can open NIST?

NIST is supported by NIST Sphere utilities, SoX, and academic speech processing tools.

Is there quality loss in the conversion?

Quality depends on NIST capabilities. The converter preserves as much fidelity as the target encoding permits at your chosen settings.

How many MP2 files can I convert at a time?

Upload and convert multiple MP2 files to NIST simultaneously — the batch feature handles them all at once without repeating steps.

Is my audio data kept private?

Uploaded MP2 files are deleted immediately after conversion. The resulting NIST outputs are removed from our servers within 24 hours.

Can I use this on a Chromebook?

Yes — the converter runs in any modern browser. ChromeOS, Windows, macOS, Linux, and mobile browsers all work for MP2 to NIST.