Please dont let the closed caption idea fizzle out. I am also willing to upload a video with closed caption included again if needed. I even saw a thread on Slashdot about somebody wanting this feature.
http://tech.slashdot.org/story/09/07/07 ... d?from=rss (
No I am not that same person who posted in Slashdot )
Here is two links that may help you understand why we are requesting this feature:
http://ccextractor.sourceforge.net/ - This person explains the difference between closed caption and subtitles and even have open source files for his extractor program that you can look at.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Closed_captioning - this wikipedia article even points out the confusion -
"Most of the world does not distinguish captions from subtitles. In the United States and Canada, these terms do have different meanings" and have some generic useful information such as
"For all types of NTSC programming, captions are "encoded" into Line 21 of the vertical blanking interval – a part of the TV picture that sits just above the visible portion and is usually unseen. For ATSC (digital television) programming, three streams are encoded in the video: two are backward compatible Line 21 captions, and the third is a set of up to 63 additional caption streams encoded in EIA-708 format."
Some more quotes.
"NTSC DVDs may carry closed captions in the Line 21 format. They are sent to the TV by the player and can be displayed with a TV's built-in decoder or a set-top decoder as usual. Independent of Line 21, video DVDs may also carry captions as a bitmap overlay which can be turned on and off via the DVD player, just like subtitles. This type of captioning is usually carried in a subtitle track labeled either "English for the hearing impaired" or, more recently, "SDH" (Subtitled for the Deaf and Hard of hearing). On some DVDs, the Line 21 captions may contain the same text as the subtitles; on others, only the Line 21 captions include the additional non-speech information needed for deaf and hard of hearing viewers. European Region 2 DVDs do not carry Line 21 captions, and instead list the subtitle languages available - English is often listed twice, one as the representation of the dialogue alone, and a second subtitle set."
Many of my friends and I are almost 100% VLC users except for the fact this program does not fully support closed captions as defined in Region 1. I am asking for either clarification on how to configure my VLC player to support closed captions or for future feature request if VLC does not fully support this feature yet.