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NUT vs OGG

NUT vs OGG

Una comparativa detallada de NUT Container y OGG Vorbis Audio — tamaño de archivo, calidad, compatibilidad y cuál elegir según tu flujo de trabajo.

NUT

NUT Container

Video Files

NUT is an open multimedia container format designed by MPlayer and FFmpeg developers as a simpler, more robust alternative to existing containers. It supports any codec and offers good error resilience with low overhead.

Sobre los archivos NUT
OGG

OGG Vorbis Audio

Audio Files

OGG Vorbis is an open-source, royalty-free lossy audio format. It generally offers better quality than MP3 at equivalent bitrates and is commonly used in gaming, open-source software, and web audio.

Sobre los archivos OGG

Comparativa de ventajas

NUT Ventajas

  • Technically efficient.
  • Low overhead.
  • FFmpeg-native support.

OGG Ventajas

  • Completely royalty-free — no patent worries for encoders or decoders.
  • Container is streaming-friendly — useful for internet radio.
  • Native support in HTML5 <audio>, every major Linux distro, and most audio tools.
  • Can multiplex any number of tracks (audio, video, text) in one file.
  • Mature tooling via libvorbis, libopus, and FFmpeg.

Limitaciones

NUT Limitaciones

  • Tiny ecosystem.
  • Overshadowed by MKV.
  • Rarely used in production.

OGG Limitaciones

  • Apple and Microsoft avoided Ogg historically — iOS and Safari only added Opus support recently.
  • Hardware decoder support is rare — encoding for battery-constrained devices (phones) still favors AAC.
  • Confusing naming: ".ogg" could be Vorbis, Opus, Speex, or FLAC.
  • Metadata conventions (Vorbis comments) are simpler than MP4's tagging.

Especificaciones técnicas

Especificación NUT OGG
MIME type video/x-nut
Extension .nut
Design FFmpeg/MPlayer collaborative spec
Encoding Variable-length integers
MIME types audio/ogg, application/ogg
Extensions .ogg (audio), .oga, .ogv (video), .ogx (app), .opus
Standard RFC 3533 (container), RFC 5334 (MIME)
Codecs Vorbis, Opus, Speex, FLAC, Theora (video), Dirac
Streaming Native (page-based structure)

Tamaños típicos de archivo

NUT

  • 10-min H.264 clip 80-200 MB

OGG

  • 3-min music (Vorbis q5 / ~160 kbps) 3.5 MB
  • 1-hour podcast (Vorbis q3) 45 MB
  • Game sound effects (Vorbis q2) 5-30 KB each

¿Listo para convertir?

Convierte entre NUT y OGG online, gratis y sin instalar nada. Subida cifrada, eliminación automática a las 2 horas.

Frequently Asked Questions

NUT (NUT Container) is a video container format that bundles one or more video streams, audio tracks, and optional subtitles into a single file. The container format determines how metadata is organised and which codecs can live inside; the visual quality itself depends on the codec (H.264, H.265, VP9, AV1) rather than the NUT wrapper. It is part of the video files family.

OGG is an open-source multimedia container format developed by the Xiph.Org Foundation. It most commonly holds Vorbis audio (for music) or Opus audio (for voice), offering good quality at lower bitrates than MP3.

VLC, MPV and PotPlayer play nearly every NUT file on desktop. Browser support varies: modern Chromium, Firefox and Safari play common containers via the HTML5 <video> tag, but niche NUT variants may fail. If a device refuses your NUT, convert to MP4 with our NUT to MP4 converter for universal playback.

OGG files play in VLC, Firefox, Chrome, foobar2000, and Audacity. Android supports OGG natively. On iOS and iTunes, you may need to convert to a supported format like MP3 or AAC.

Upload your NUT to KaijuConverter and pick MP4, MOV, MKV, WebM, or any other target. Our pipeline uses FFmpeg under the hood and stream-copies when codecs are compatible (no quality loss) or transcodes at high-quality defaults otherwise. Conversion runs server-side; both files delete within two hours.

Only when the target requires re-encoding. If the codecs inside NUT match what the target container supports, FFmpeg stream-copies the streams and the output is bit-identical to the source. Transcoding uses transparent quality defaults (CRF 20–23 H.264) and produces output indistinguishable from the original at normal viewing distance.