![]() ![]() ![]() This uses the built in captions support of Twitch's video player so viewers only get the limited amount of positioning options that the player provides. Transcripts and Open Captions do work.ĭoes NOT appear to work with the AMD Hardware encoder in OBS on Windows (other hardware encoders like NVEnc and even AMD on MacOS seem fine) The option will only show up once the streamer has talked.ĭoes NOT support native caption output for languages with foreign character sets like Japanese or Russian, that isn't possible the way Twitch and OBS captions work. On Android it's Closed Captions under the player settings options right beneath the quality selection.If it's already off but viewers still see captions they have to turn it on and off again (appears to be a bug on some iOS versions).On iOS it's a system wide setting: Settings -> General -> Accessibility -> Subtitles & Captioning -> Closed Captions + SHD.On PC viewers can turn captions on and off using the CC button on the bottom right of the player.They are supported by many video players, websites and tools and are easy to edit.Ĭaptions should be off by default for most viewers but Twitch does sometimes have them enabled for some viewers for unknown reasons so occasionally some will be confused on how to turn them off and might need it explained. SRT transcript files are generally recommended for saving captions for local recordings.The results are usually be pretty good in normal conversational settings like talking to chat but the recognition quality can go down noticeably when using ingame terms or other specialized vocabulary or during hectic speaking. The quality of Google's Speech Recognition heavily depends on the speaker and what is being said.Some video players like MPV can show embedded captions on downloaded VODs but very few support that. ![]()
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