View Full Version : Displaying OPEN captions in rendered output???


Reid Bailey
December 28th, 2010, 08:46 AM
Hi all,

I'm kind of banging my head against the wall with trying to figure out how to display OPEN captions in my rendered output.

I can handle getting the captioning text into vegas and on the time line.
I can get it to appear in the preview window when I select the overlay for the Closed Caption 1 channel.

But what I want to do to is display the CC text as Open Captioned, basically in a burn in window for lack of a better term.

For 508c compliancy we have to post an open captioned version to the web.

Can anyone figure out how to make the caption info visible when I render out?

Edward Troxel
December 28th, 2010, 09:56 AM
I would use standard titles for that.

Reid Bailey
December 29th, 2010, 08:03 AM
okay, thanks.

It just seems like there would be a better way since I can see everything in the preview window.

I realize encoding performs a lot of magic behind the scenes, but it's all right there.
I was hoping for a switch setting or something :-(

Bob Safay
December 29th, 2010, 01:47 PM
Reid, I'm in the same boat with 508. I can get CC on the dvd, but not for the web. Bob

Seth Bloombaum
December 29th, 2010, 03:03 PM
...For 508c compliancy we have to post an open captioned version to the web...
Reid, I'm in the same boat with 508. I can get CC on the dvd, but not for the web. Bob
Is this really true?

I think there's a workflow where:
We encode a wmv with closed cap.
We play it back with a silverlight player that is cross-platform and cross-browser, and presents a "CC" button.

I've not really tested this out, but I see all the features in Vegas and Silverlight to do it... Been doing a lot of SL work recently, it really is a slick distribution method for web video.

Edward Troxel
December 29th, 2010, 03:19 PM
Worst case, a script should be able to change your command markers from the closed caption type to the wmv caption type.

Chip Gallo
January 5th, 2011, 12:45 PM
Section 508 does NOT require open captions. It's your choice, open or closed. Many prefer to let the viewer turn them on. See Video and Multimedia Products (1194.24) (http://www.access-board.gov/sec508/guide/1194.24.htm).