MPEG to GSM Converter

Extract MPEG video audio as GSM speech format online

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Video to Voice Format

Pull speech content from MPEG video and compress it with GSM 06.10 — the mobile telecommunications standard for voice audio worldwide.

Aggressive Compression

GSM shrinks MPEG audio to roughly 10% of raw PCM size. Ideal for voice storage where compact files take priority over musical quality.

Cloud Processing

GSM encoding is CPU-intensive but runs on our servers. Upload your MPEG and download the compressed speech file without local overhead.

How to convert MPEG 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

MPEG (MPEG-1) is a foundational video and audio compression standard published in August 1993 by the Moving Picture Experts Group as ISO/IEC 11172. It was the first international standard for lossy compression of moving pictures and associated audio, establishing principles and techniques that would influence virtually all subsequent video codecs. MPEG-1 video achieves compression through a combination of motion-compensated prediction, discrete cosine transform coding, and variable-length entropy encoding, organized around three frame types: I-frames (intra-coded), P-frames (predicted), and B-frames (bidirectionally predicted). The standard targets bit rates around 1.5 Mbps for combined audio and video, producing quality comparable to VHS tape at SIF resolution (352x240 for NTSC). This compression level was specifically chosen to match the data throughput of 1x-speed CD-ROM drives, enabling the Video CD format that brought digital video to consumers in the early 1990s. The audio component, particularly Layer III (MP3), went on to become the most influential audio format in history. The I/P/B frame structure, motion estimation approach, and block-based transform coding established the architectural template followed by every major video codec since, from MPEG-2 through H.264 and beyond. Though long surpassed in compression efficiency, MPEG-1 remains supported by virtually all media software.
Initial release: August 1993
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 MPEG to GSM?

GSM 06.10 is the speech compression standard from mobile telecommunications. MPEG video audio can be compacted for voicemail and VoIP use.

Is GSM good for MPEG audio?

GSM handles speech well but degrades music. If your MPEG video contains dialogue, GSM captures it compactly for telephony purposes.

What compression does GSM offer?

GSM 06.10 achieves roughly 10:1 compression versus raw PCM. Extremely efficient for storing and transmitting speech audio content.

What uses GSM audio?

Mobile network infrastructure, voicemail platforms, and VoIP systems rely on GSM encoding for efficient speech storage and delivery.

Can I convert multiple MPEG files?

Upload several MPEG videos and batch-convert them all to GSM. Efficient for creating voice prompt collections from video archives.

Does our server handle the load?

Yes — GSM encoding runs entirely on our cloud servers. Your machine is not burdened by the CPU-intensive speech compression process.

MPEG to GSM Quality Rating

4.4 (79 votes)
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