Closed Captioning Final Cut X
NAB 2018 will see an update to another NLE as Final Cut Pro X will hit version 10.4.1. This comes just a few months after the big 10.4 update that brought new color tools among the major new features. This is an incremental update with a few noteworthy features including closed captioning tools, enhanced exporting options. Captions can also be used for subtitles, karaoke, scrolling news items, and teleprompters. Government regulators, broadcasters, and streaming services often have specific requirements for closed captions and subtitles. In Final Cut Pro X, you can create captions for your project right in the timeline, or you can import them into your project.
Final Cut X Mac
MovieCaptoiner doesn't support the higher end featuers of MacCaption (the industry leader). These really are your only two choices. And I belive MacCaption supports more video formats/codecs. I've used MacCaption and like it a lot, very easy to use.
Closed Captioning is actually a process of encoding text and it's metadata into the video file, so it does take a bit of doing to create a program to do that.
As for step-by-step directions, you'll have to do the tutorials for which ever application you purchase.
There is no FCPX plugin for this yet.
What type of video are you doing; university, wedding stuff, corporate?
Lenovo x230 recovery media download. How many of these do you have to encode a week?
How are you transcribing the audio?
Would you be willing to do closed captioning as a side business to help pay for the software?
Jan 17, 2014 1:57 AM