Your files stay on your Mac.
Flash (FLV) files bundle video and audio in a single container. Converting to FLAC extracts the audio stream and encodes it as a lossless FLAC file — no re-compression artefacts, no quality loss. Everything runs on your Mac; files never leave your machine.
Drag one FLV file or an entire folder into Convertessa. Batch mode processes every Flash file in a single pass.
Choose FLAC from the output list. Convertessa will extract the audio track and encode it as lossless FLAC.
Click Convert. Your FLAC files are written beside the originals on your Mac in seconds.
Images, audio, video, documents, archives and eBooks — all converted natively, right on your Mac.
Pick a format you have — see everything Convertessa can turn it into.
Convert hundreds of files at once with per-type group defaults and individual overrides.
First-class support for HEIC, AVIF and WebP — encode and decode, both ways. Read JPEG XL and a dozen more modern formats too.
Drop files anywhere on the window. Native, instant, and exactly what you’d expect on a Mac.
Dial in compression, resolution and bitrate. Keep originals pristine or shrink for sharing.
Never overwrite a file by accident. Convertessa appends safe suffixes automatically.
Every job is logged locally. Re-run a previous conversion or revisit recent outputs in a click.
Bundle your converted files straight into a single ZIP, TAR or 7z — packaged and ready to share the moment a job finishes.
Right-click any file in Finder and choose Convert. A Quick Action handles it on the spot — no need to open the app first.
Shrink Convertessa to a tidy mini window that tucks into a corner — just a drop zone and a format picker for quick, one-off conversions.
No cloud. No account. No upload. Every conversion happens entirely on-device, using the power already in your Mac. What you convert is nobody’s business but yours.
Script conversions, wire them into your build, or batch a folder from the terminal. The same engine, no GUI required.
Read the full CLI documentation →Shrink Convertessa down to a small, focused window — drop, convert, done, with your recent conversions one click away.
macOS 14+ · Apple Silicon & Intel
New formats, new features, and fixes — every release, on the record.
No. FLAC is a lossless format, so the audio is preserved exactly as it was inside the original Flash file — no re-compression, no quality loss.
Only the audio stream is written to the FLAC output. The video track is discarded — FLAC is a pure audio format and cannot carry video.
Yes. Drop a folder onto Convertessa or run convertessa *.flv --to flac from the command line to convert every Flash file in one pass.