![]() My subtitles won't work in Mac OSX 10.7 or later More information on this issue with suggested workarounds can be found in this article: If you are a Mac user running Mac OSX 10.7 or later, you will not be able to view your subtitled movies in QuickTime 10, so you will have to use QuickTime 7. For that reason, we recommend keeping text limited to a few lines per timecode. If you insert a timecode and text followed by 15 lines of empty space, then in your subtitled movie you will see your subtitle plus 15 blank lines! In addition, your subtitled area will default to 15 lines. Be mindful of what you type after each timecode. If you want to make changes, go back to the original InqScribe document, make your changes there, and save a new subtitled movie.Ĥ. Note that you cannot save more subtitles on top of an already subtitled movie. Once you save your subtitled movie, open that new file in QuickTime 7 to see your subtitles. Settings include the font, color, size, location to save the subtitled movie, name of the movie, etc.ģ. In the subtitle settings window, choose the settings you want. When you think you are done, choose File > Save Subtitled QuickTime Movie. Open your original source video in InqScribe (no subtitles yet) then use InqScribe to transcribe the video, insert timecodes where you want subtitles to appear, and type the text you want to appear as subtitles after each timecode.Ģ. ![]() Here is a summary and some additional tips:ġ. ![]() ![]() More info here.Ī video tutorial for creating a subtitled QuickTime movie is available on YouTube Note: If you're running InqScribe 2.5 or later, this feature is no longer available. Modified on: Fri, 30 Sep, 2022 at 1:27 PM ![]()
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