> > This is quite correct, DVDs use four colour bitmaps for subtitles > and often they are too small to read. I don't know of any decent > subtitle rippers for Linux but if you have a Windows PC you can use > subrip to OCR the bitmaps to a srt file and save this with the video > files, not sure exactly where for a DVD, you can use the encoding > server to rip the dvd to an avi file. mplayer can read these and > display them with the video and you can then set the size. I don't > know about xine as I prefer mplayer. >
there´s a ksubtitleripper, that do that... it´s a front-end to subtitleripper/gocr. I tried it once, it´s not perfect, but may do the work. I prefer xine because the way it handle subtitles... xine can use the black borders of a 16:9 movie on a 4:3 tv to show the subtitles, as far as I know, mplayer cant (please, tell me that I´m wrong :-) ). -- Christian Lyra POP-PR - RNP http://lyra.soueu.com.br Thus spake the master programmer: ``Though a program be but three lines long, someday it will have to be maintained.'' The Tao Of Programing ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by DB2 Express Download DB2 Express C - the FREE version of DB2 express and take control of your XML. No limits. Just data. Click to get it now. http://sourceforge.net/powerbar/db2/ _______________________________________________ Freevo-users mailing list Freevo-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freevo-users