WEBM to AMR - Convert audio online

Conversion Results:
# Output File Source File Action
How to convert WEBM to AMR:

1. Click the "Choose Files" button to select multiple files from your local device, or click the "URL" button to choose an online file. The source file can also be in video format. Video or audio file size can be up to 200MB. You can use the file analyzer to view the source audio's detailed information, such as track name, genre, bitrate, and sampling rate.

2. Set the target audio format, bitrate, and sample rate. The target audio format can be WAV, WMA, MP3, OGG, AAC, AU, FLAC, M4A, MKA, AIFF, OPUS, or RA.

3. Click the "Convert Now!" button to start batch conversion. It will automatically retry conversion on another server if one fails; please be patient while converting. The output files will be listed in the "Conversion Results" section. Click the icon to show the file QR code or save the file to cloud storage services such as Google Drive, OneDrive, or Dropbox.

WEBM vs AMR:
Name WEBM AMR
Full name HTML5 Video Adaptive Multi-Rate
File extension .webm .amr, .3ga
MIME video/webm, audio/webm audio/amr
Developed by Google 3GPP
Type of format Video file format Audio compression format
Introduction WebM is a video file format. It is primarily intended to offer a royalty-free alternative to use in the HTML5 video tag. It has a sister project WebP for images. The development of the format is sponsored by Google, and the corresponding software is distributed under a BSD license. The Adaptive Multi-Rate (AMR or AMR-NB or GSM-AMR) audio codec is an audio compression format optimized for speech coding. AMR was adopted as the standard speech codec by 3GPP in October 1999 and is now widely used in GSM and UMTS.
Technical details The WebM container is based on a profile of Matroska. WebM initially supported VP8 video and Vorbis audio streams. In 2013 it was updated to accommodate VP9 video and Opus audio. AMR speech codec consists of a multi-rate narrowband speech codec that encodes narrowband (200-3400 Hz) signals at variable bit rates ranging from 4.75 to 12.2 kbit/s with toll quality speech starting at 7.4 kbit/s. Sampling frequency 8 kHz/13-bit (160 samples for 20 ms frames), filtered to 200-3400 Hz.
Associated programs VLC media player, MPlayer, K-Multimedia Player, Mozilla Firefox, Opera, Google Chrome, FFmpeg. Audacity, FFmpeg, MPlayer, QuickTime, VLC media player
Sample file sample.webm sample.amr
Wikipedia WEBM on Wikipedia AMR on Wikipedia