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Video Conversion

Convert MP4 to OGV — Free Online Converter

Convert MPEG-4 Part 14 (.mp4) to Ogg Video (.ogv) online for free. Fast, secure video conversion with no watermarks or registration....

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Cara Mengonversi

1

Upload your .mp4 file by dragging it into the upload area or clicking to browse.

2

Choose your output settings. The default settings work great for most files.

3

Click Convert and download your .ogv file when it's ready.

About MP4 to OGV Conversion

MP4 to OGV conversion transcodes your MPEG-4 video into the Ogg Video format using the Theora video codec and Vorbis audio codec. OGV is a completely open, royalty-free video format maintained by the Xiph.Org Foundation. It was the first open video codec to gain widespread browser support and was instrumental in the early HTML5 video movement before WebM and AV1 emerged.

Our converter transcodes the MP4 video stream to Theora and the audio to Vorbis, muxing both into the Ogg container with the .ogv extension.

Why Convert MP4 to OGV?

OGV is relevant when you need a completely patent-free, open-source video format. Some organizations, particularly in government, education, and open-source communities, have policies requiring royalty-free media formats. Wikipedia uses Ogg Theora for all video content. LibreOffice Impress embeds OGV for presentations. Firefox historically preferred OGV before adding H.264 support. While WebM (VP8/VP9) has largely succeeded OGV for new content, existing Theora-based systems still require this format.

Common Use Cases

  • Upload video content to Wikipedia and Wikimedia Commons (requires open formats)
  • Embed video in LibreOffice Impress presentations
  • Deliver video on platforms with patent-free format policies
  • Publish educational content under Creative Commons with open codecs
  • Support legacy web applications built around Ogg Theora players

How It Works

FFmpeg transcodes the MP4 H.264 video to Theora using the libtheora encoder. Quality targets range from 0 (lowest) to 10 (highest), with 6-7 producing good results for web delivery. Audio is re-encoded to Vorbis. Theora is based on VP3, an older codec from On2 Technologies, and is significantly less efficient than H.264 or VP9 — expect larger files or lower quality at equivalent bitrates. Maximum practical resolution is 1080p, though Theora performs best at 480p-720p.

Quality & Performance

Theora is an older codec that cannot match H.264's compression efficiency. At equivalent bitrates, Theora produces softer, more artifact-prone output. For acceptable quality at 720p, target bitrate should be 2-4 Mbps (compared to 1-2 Mbps for H.264). At 480p and below, the quality difference narrows. For new projects, consider WebM (VP9) as a more efficient open alternative.

FFMPEG EngineModerateMinimal Quality Loss

Device Compatibility

DeviceMP4OGV
Windows PCNativePartial
macOSNativePartial
iPhone/iPadNativePartial
AndroidNativePartial
LinuxPartialPartial
Web BrowserNativeNo

Recommended Settings by Platform

YouTube

Resolution: 1920x1080

Bitrate: 8-12 Mbps

H.264 recommended for fast processing

Instagram

Resolution: 1080x1080

Bitrate: 3.5 Mbps

Square or 9:16 for Reels

TikTok

Resolution: 1080x1920

Bitrate: 4 Mbps

9:16 vertical, under 60s ideal

Twitter/X

Resolution: 1280x720

Bitrate: 5 Mbps

Under 140s, 512MB max

WhatsApp

Resolution: 960x540

Bitrate: 2 Mbps

16MB limit for standard, 64MB for document

Discord

Resolution: 1280x720

Bitrate: 4 Mbps

8MB free, 50MB Nitro

Tips for Best Results

  • 1Use quality level 7 for a good balance of file size and visual clarity
  • 2Target 720p or lower — Theora's efficiency drops rapidly at higher resolutions
  • 3Allocate 2-3x the bitrate you would use for H.264 to achieve comparable quality
  • 4For new open-source projects, WebM (VP9) is a better choice than OGV
  • 5Use OGV specifically when uploading to Wikipedia or embedding in LibreOffice

Related Conversions

OGV serves the open-source and patent-free content ecosystem. While not as efficient as modern codecs, it remains necessary for Wikipedia uploads, LibreOffice presentations, and organizations committed to royalty-free media.

Pertanyaan yang Sering Diajukan

For specific use cases, yes. Wikipedia requires it, LibreOffice supports it natively, and some organizations mandate patent-free formats. For general web video, WebM or MP4 are better choices.
OGV with Theora codec is significantly less efficient than MP4 with H.264. You need roughly double the bitrate to achieve similar visual quality. Theora dates from 2004 and predates modern compression advances.
VLC plays OGV on both Android and iOS. Native support varies by device. OGV is primarily a web and desktop format.
WebM (VP9) is the better choice for new projects — it is also open-source and royalty-free but much more efficient than Theora. Use OGV only when Theora is specifically required.
YouTube accepts OGV but will re-encode it to its own formats. Uploading in MP4 or WebM gives YouTube a higher-quality source to work with.

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