- From: timeless <timeless@gmail.com>
- Date: Wed, 16 Feb 2011 12:27:14 +0200
On Wed, Feb 16, 2011 at 10:23 AM, Kevin Marks <kevinmarks at gmail.com> wrote: > Moving them only within the video viewport is a bug, not a feature. Of note, the big tv we had in 2000 (probably purchased circa 1998) at a college communal area would display captions for the PIP window below the PIP. So even TV vendors were aware that they didn't need to always stick captions into the box once they had reasonable resolution. Sadly I don't think I've ever seen any TVs which would shrink the primary window just to supply space for captions. There's no reason they couldn't, since they also do shrink the window to provide onscreen menus or program guides. I suppose part of the reason with big TVs is an assumption that the audience will be at a fixed distance with or without captions, but shrinking the view area for the programming would cause the preferred distance to decrease. And as content providers actually do try to pick areas which are mostly dead, the tradeoff of losing "live pixels" vs decreasing optimal distance was not considered worth it. > Classic > TV required this (especially with overscan), but on modern TV's there is > often a letterbox or pillarbox are that captions should go in. Indeed. I'm pretty sure I saw a DVD playes which took advantage of this with a letterbox and stuck the captions below the movie in January when I was in California. > On a > decent-sized computer screen, there is no real excuse for obscuring the > video with the captions rather than putting them underneath or alongside. Yep. Well, it wouldn't be wrong for someone to write a 'Misery compatibility mode' application to enable people to see how their captions would look on old TVs, but I don't think that's something for which primary applications should be designed.
Received on Wednesday, 16 February 2011 02:27:14 UTC