![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#41
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article
.co.uk.invalid, Aren't scripts available to subtitlers in electronic form? Surely editing the text of a script would be easier than the manglings that come out of a voice recognition application. but, when the computer created subtitles are used it's because it's a live (ie unscripted) programme. -- From KT24 - in "Leafy Surrey" Using a RISC OS computer running v5.11 |
|
#42
|
|||
|
|||
|
Alan Pemberton wrote:
Dickie mint wrote: ..... Yes I think it is Voice Recognition, with the subtitler sometimes voicing over the words, certainly with pre-recorded stuff. Aren't scripts available to subtitlers in electronic form? Surely editing the text of a script would be easier than the manglings that come out of a voice recognition application. I think the idea is that the subtitler doesn't have to be a stenographer and that, by voicing the script/whatever, the computer used by the subtitler has a greater degree of accuracy. Merely typing up the words is too slow as they then have to be synched up to the pictures? In other words the subtitler talks over the programme whilst watching it. Hey, my wife's good at that! |
|
#43
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 01/11/2007, Nigel Barker wrote in message
: Is it real people doing the subtitling? Depends what you're watching. If it's the news, the initial parse is done automatically, and a human corrects it as quickly as they can. Simon. -- http://www.hearsay.demon.co.uk |
|
#45
|
|||
|
|||
|
haven't a clue what' going on! But this time the subtitles were dreadful - out of sync with the video. Particularly annoying when there were subtitles on screen for speech that hadn't yet started! Not 100% sure, but I think it was called 'The Long Riders'. I am reminded of an incident a number of years back. It was in Sweden and I happened across a showing of an episode of "Jude Judy" - with subtitles to "All rise for Julian Clary". It took them a few minutes to notice the mistake and stop the broadcast. |
|
#46
|
|||
|
|||
|
The only medical side effects I am aware of from the implantation of
cochlear implants a 1. Risk of accidentally cutting the facial nerves on one side of the head, hence making you look like you've had a stroke 2. The middle ear has to be removed in order to accommodate the cochlear implant, this means that when the cochlear implant is turned off, that ear is COMPLETELY TOTALLY deaf. Even in the very deafest of people without cochlear implants, they can still hear something if the sound is loud enough 3. The sound of a cochlear implant is very similar to that of Donald Duck, so the sound from a cochlear implant sounds very electronic. The Implantee then has to spend typically a few years getting acclimatised to the sounds experienced from a cochlear implant inorde to actually make sense of the sounds around them Mallory. "ChrisM" wrote in message ... In message , Mallory Proclaimed from the tallest tower: from the little i've seen of programs like see hear, there seems to be quite a few people who i'd call 'militant' deaf. Yes I know what you mean...... asking them to do what you have would seem to offend them as much as asking a black person to pretend they are white - it's really hard for me to understand - they see being deaf not as something that just happened to their body, but as their actual identity. Yes I know what you mean... What really gets me going is the "deaf militants" views on cochlear implants They say that fitting cochlear implants to deaf children before they are at a suitable age to give informed consent to the cochlear implant is akin to Hitler's practice of drilling holes into defenceless childrens heads and forcing deaf children to hear against their own free choice or free will. eh? Who on earth would CHOOSE to be deaf? Is there are side effects of issues caused by these implants? If there is then I guess there is a case for the argument that they should eb able to make an informed choice. If the only effect is that they help you to hear better what on earth is the problem? I'm not arguing that being deaf makes you an 2nd class citizen or anything like that, but surely given a choice most people would prefer to be able to hear?? btw, I realise you are only quoting this point of view, and it obvioulsy is not your own, so I'm not having a go at you! -- Regards, Chris. (Remove Elvis's shoes to email me) |
|
#47
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 07/11/2007, Alan Pemberton wrote in message
.co.uk.invalid: Similar problem with 'Help!' the other week. The first subtitle was in sync but they immediately began lagging the dialogue more and more. At the end there seemed to be one or two attempts to achieve sync, but they all failed. This is a side-effect of one of the formats used for supplying subtitles. It uses frame numbers to tell when each subtitle should appear and disappear. Unfortunately, many films get converted between 24 and 25 frames per second sometime in the process and the frame numbers don't get changed. Simon. -- http://www.hearsay.demon.co.uk |
|
#48
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Fri, 09 Nov 2007 23:30:57 +0000, Simon Slavin
. uk wrote: This is a side-effect of one of the formats used for supplying subtitles. It uses frame numbers to tell when each subtitle should appear and disappear. Unfortunately, many films get converted between 24 and 25 frames per second sometime in the process and the frame numbers don't get changed. Surely someone checks that before transmission, though? -- |
|
#49
|
|||
|
|||
|
If a programme comes on with SL I just turn it off and do without, I just
loose concentation of the programme as\my brain is distracted. It seems more and more programmes on digital TV have this SL. When the analogue is switched off I can see the complaints rising against it. Yes I'm sure those need SL will greatly appreciate it, but the broadcasters should do it in a way not to annoy the rest of us. We can choose to see or not see the written sub titles, so come on BBC etc do the same with SL. Regards david |
|
#50
|
|||
|
|||
|
[in reply to this and zero tolerance]
On 10/11/2007, Alan Pemberton wrote in message .co.uk.invalid: Simon Slavin . uk wrote: This is a side-effect of one of the formats used for supplying subtitles. It uses frame numbers to tell when each subtitle should appear and disappear. Unfortunately, many films get converted between 24 and 25 frames per second sometime in the process and the frame numbers don't get changed. Yes, it seemed like a 24/25fps thing, but I couldn't imagine how that could happen operationally with a top-flight, internationally respected broadcaster of some years' standing. Ah, wait a minute, I'm mistaken; it was the BBC, wasn't it? Heh. Many programmes go through a number of versions -- two or three on average -- as various things like captioning are added, and the BBC doesn't have a screening room with people watching the finished versions of everything before they're broadcast. It would cost too much and add too much time to the production schedule. In all honesty, when you're transmitting six channels 24 hours a day, and you're funded in a ... unique ... way, things occasionally slip through the net. Simon. -- http://www.hearsay.demon.co.uk |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| sign language | Trevor Wright | UK digital tv | 44 | April 19th 06 12:40 AM |
| Filter by language? | Top Spin | Tivo personal television | 2 | January 1st 05 12:40 AM |
| Sky and foriegn language stations | Peter | UK digital tv | 3 | November 1st 04 01:59 PM |
| Channel 5 and sign language? | Paul D.Smith | UK digital tv | 28 | October 3rd 04 11:59 AM |
| sign language and subtitles | Bill | UK digital tv | 2 | September 23rd 04 10:19 PM |