Practical focus
Use this page when you want desktop browser audio compression on Windows, Mac, or Linux without installing software.
Compress audio on a PC with drag-and-drop, larger-file handling, and practical MP3, AAC, or OGG output settings.
Use this page when you want desktop browser audio compression on Windows, Mac, or Linux without installing software.
| PC workflow | Suggested setting |
|---|---|
| Large WAV recording | MP3/AAC, 96-192 kbps |
| Podcast editing export | MP3, 96-128 kbps |
| Music demo | MP3, 160-192 kbps |
| Archive source | Keep original, export copy |
| Many files | Use batch compressor |
Desktop browsers are practical for MP3, WAV, M4A, AAC, OGG, and FLAC inputs through ffmpeg.wasm.
Use MP3 for broad sharing, AAC for efficient playback, and OGG for web or game assets.
A PC usually has more memory and CPU headroom than a phone, so larger local compression jobs are more realistic.
File size still depends on duration, bitrate, sample rate, channels, and output format. The device only affects processing speed.
Compression runs in your browser, so the original audio is not uploaded to a server.
Large files can still be slow because decoding and encoding use your device memory and CPU.
Yes. Use a modern browser on Windows.
Yes. It runs in modern macOS browsers as well.
For large files, usually yes because desktops often have more memory and CPU.
No. The tool runs in the browser.
Often yes, but processing time depends on file length and device memory.