![]() ![]() There, you must enable CC rendering separately, in the system-level Settings app. There's no icon in the stock Videos player under iOS either. In QuickTime X coming with recent OS X versions, there's no any kind of icon – you need to en/disable CC rendering in its menu, via View > Show Closed Captioning. ![]() For example, the desktop iTunes presents you with an icon (annotated with a red rectangle): The (Apple) CC's in Apple's iTunes Store / University movies are rendered by Apple's all players. Note that I've also explained this in THIS MacRumors thread.ġ.1.2 Enabling CC rendering in Apple's operating systems Or, for that matter, keep on an SD card or other kind of similar mass memory (see THIS for info on using Apple's Camera Connection Kit for this) This means you do not need to store your movies you've purchased from Apple – you can just copy them to, say, an SD card and use iFile's player to play them back. Should you want to avoid having to synchronize your DRM'ed videos to your iDevice via iTunes and would prefer copying them via iTunes File Sharing, this is an excellent workaround. (as with all images below, click the thumbnail for a much better-quality and larger one!) The latter, of course, will only allow for playing the file back from the stock Videos app – or, if the device is jailbroken, the uppermost “ Video Player” item in the absolutely essential jailbreak file handler tool iFile: The embedded CC track will also be saved and the resulting file will be playable in iTunes on an authorized computer or iDevice. However, you can save it without problems. ![]() In QT7 Pro, after copying a slice of the DRM'ed video to the clipboard, when you create a new video and paste the content of the clipboard into it, it'll state it's not authorized to play it back. ![]() The former could have been created on any (not necessarily authorized) computer with QuickTime Pro 7.ġ.1.1 Editing (cut / copy) DRM'ed videos in QuickTime 7 ProĪ side note on how I've created the latter video (An editing and iOS playback trick): For creating the latter, I used QuickTime Pro 7 on an authorized desktop computer. Of the former iTunes U videos (more specifically, of the second in the list), I've created a chunk, available for download HERE of the latter (1080p Full HD Men in Black II), HERE. With non-iTunes U movies, the CC icon is in the left side: For example, in the above iTunes U example, all non-slide downloads have CC's. You can easily see, before purchasing, if a given title has CC's: just look for the “ CC” icon. The difference between CC and textual subsįirst and foremost, everything you purchase or download from Apple's iTunes Store have CC subtitles only (if at all): both movies you do pay for (the minority of the paid movies, unfortunately) and the free iTunes University videos for example, the ones HERE (the Stanford U iOS programming course). In this article, I've elaborate on the difference, the CC-to-subs conversion and the rendering of the original (Apple) CC's in desktop and iOS players.ġ. There is a lot of confusion (see for example THIS) around Closed Captions (CC for short) they are routinely mistaken for traditional, textual subtitles ( subs for short), even in the non-TV-streaming / DVD, that is, strictly Apple world. ![]()
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