Subtitles is an Occupation normally listed under Other Crew. If the credits directly indicate it, then it might also be listed under Special Effects or Visual Effects.
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| - Subtitles is an Occupation normally listed under Other Crew. If the credits directly indicate it, then it might also be listed under Special Effects or Visual Effects.
- A movie can have up to 8 subtitle tracks. Initially there is only one Subtitle track visible to save space. As you add the subtitles to this track a new, empty track will become available. DVD-lab PRO allows you to import various subtitles and also adjust timing, text and visual effects.
- The NTSC version of the game has subtitles available in three different languages.
* English
* French
* Spanish
- Subtitles are supported for the ScreenPlay Pro HD in several ways. With ripped DVDs stored in either ISO or VIDEO_TS directory, subtitles are supported as part of the DVD. However, you can also include subtitles with other formats. The MKV format also supports subtitles.
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abstract
| - Subtitles is an Occupation normally listed under Other Crew. If the credits directly indicate it, then it might also be listed under Special Effects or Visual Effects.
- A movie can have up to 8 subtitle tracks. Initially there is only one Subtitle track visible to save space. As you add the subtitles to this track a new, empty track will become available. DVD-lab PRO allows you to import various subtitles and also adjust timing, text and visual effects.
- The NTSC version of the game has subtitles available in three different languages.
* English
* French
* Spanish
- Subtitles are supported for the ScreenPlay Pro HD in several ways. With ripped DVDs stored in either ISO or VIDEO_TS directory, subtitles are supported as part of the DVD. However, you can also include subtitles with other formats. For instance, your AVI or MPG files can also show subtitles on the ScreenPlay Pro HD. All you need to do to have the ScreenPlay automatically pick up the subtitle is to include the subtitle file in the same directory as the AVI or MPG. The srt file can be in UTF-8, Ansi, or Unicode txt format. If one of the formats is not working for you, try a different one. You can convert it by open srt file with "notepad" and save as the file type you want. In the case of Unicode, it must be a properly encoded file (notepad will automatically convert it if it isn't). The MKV format also supports subtitles.
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