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| The MultiMedia forum Whether it is Music,Tv,PlayStation Games or any other sort of MultiMedia this is the forum to discuss it, also you can post your youtube videos etc on this forum. |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| Cynical Member Last Online: 02-11-2009 09:10 PM Join Date: Dec 2005 Location: Ratchada
Posts: 1,441
| CMN, I spent hours and hours trying to do exactly what you're trying to do. There is a sticky on ajarn about it: Subtitles! - Ajarn Forum - Living and Teaching In Thailand There is a site for Thai subtitles: :: ThaiSubtitle.com :: ศูนย์รวมซับไตเติลสำหรับคนไทย, Translate Movie Subtitles English into Thai You can only download the subtitles that are 100%. I tried to do this for Lost Season 4, because the g/f wanted to watch it. I followed the instructions written in the sticky, but couldn't make it work. I even downloaded several different media players. The basic problem is that none of the players recognized the Thai text. You need to download the font as well, but mine kept coming up in some gibberish. After about 2 weeks of trying, I finally gave up. If you get it to work somehow, let me know and I'll green you for life.
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Bounced Last Online: Yesterday 03:55 PM Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: The land of milking honeys
Posts: 3,111
| To get working Thai subs, go for VOBSUB (which comes as a pair of files, one .sub file and one .idx file). NOT to be confused with micro-DVD subs, which is a text based format that also has the file ending .sub, but are standalone subtitles. If you get text based subtitles your operating system needs to support Thai, and arranging that can be a bitch. VOBSUB subtitles are bitmap-based subtitles and are compatible with most decent software media players, such as VLC, as well as some of the better standalone DVD players. Among media boxes, DvicO's TviX players is one of the few offering support for VOBSUB subtitles, whereas the NMT platform has yet to add support in their firmware; it is in the pipeline though. The downside with VOBSUB subtitles is that due to their graphics-based format, they take up a lot more space than text-based formats. This in turn means that burning one DVDrip to one CD will generally not be possible, since DVDrips in AVI format typically are sized to fit exactly on a CD (695-700MB) and a VOBSUB subtitle set is typically several MBs, so they won't fit together. The solution is to watch from your computer's hard disk, save to an external hard disk, or to DVDs as data files. For this reason it is worth investing a few thousand baht in a DVD player that will play your XviD and DivX AVI files from a DVD disc.
__________________ This golden age of communication Means everyone talks at the same time And liberty just means the freedom to exploit Any weakness that you can find |
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| | #5 (permalink) | |
| punk douche bag Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: o dan y bryn
Posts: 28,059
| Quote:
this is what i do anyway, have a divx compatible dvd player. will give this a go. but where do i get the subs from? | |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Cynical Member Last Online: 02-11-2009 09:10 PM Join Date: Dec 2005 Location: Ratchada
Posts: 1,441
| ^As do I - it's how I watch all of my torrents. The only site that I've seen Thai subs for download is the one I mentioned a few posts above. I have no idea if they are good Thai subs or just some moron inputting Thai subs from a Thai-English dictionary like they have on the brand new movies you can buy here. I think I did download that VOBSUB program. It mentions exactly what to do in the ajarn sticky. I could do everything except for one thing: change the font on my media player. I tried GOM, VLC, BSPlayer, etc. You can't change the font of the subtitles in any of them, and the Thai script has a specific font you need to use in order for it to show up (I forget what it is now). Once you have this font, you should be able to just change it in the media player files, but I could never make it work. I can encode English subs just fine, but not Thai. Surely there's a way to do it, and if anyone can successfully change the font in their media player, let me know --- I would be extremely grateful!! |
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| punk douche bag Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: o dan y bryn
Posts: 28,059
| thanks to both. on a similar note. i just burned sex and the city movie for Doris, that's why I wanted to find some thai subtitles in the first place. Even though the audio works fine on the pc, there is no audio when I burn it to dvd. this is not the first time it's happened. anybody got any idea what's up with that?
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| | #9 (permalink) | |
| Mactard Last Online: Today 12:07 AM Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Moo 2
Posts: 2,375
| Quote:
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| Bounced Last Online: Yesterday 03:55 PM Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: The land of milking honeys
Posts: 3,111
| The simple answer is your DVD player doesn't support the audio format used in the files you've burned. You can always convert to a supported format though - converting to mp3 should be failsafe. It isn't rocket science to do either. I usually use MediaCoder for both video and audio conversion (just Google MediaCoder download) - not sure if it is available for Linux, but if not, I am sure there are other options. Anyone who is often downloading stuff should download Avinaptic and MediaInfo, both are freeware programs (just google Avinaptic download / MediaInfo download). Any media file that gives you grief, run it through one of these programs, save the log and copy/paste it here, I can interpret it for you if you find it daunting - but it really is only a matter of finding where the audio codec is stated in the list of information, and realize that in the future you need to convert files with that audio format. |
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| | #15 (permalink) |
| punk douche bag Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: o dan y bryn
Posts: 28,059
| ^ I did. I also just burned the final of Canadian Idol and episodes 7-13 of Aussie Idol. btw Frankenstein. mediacoder is installed and operational but I don't really understand how I convert my file to mp3. I can't find the convert options in the menu anywhere. |
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| | #16 (permalink) |
| Bounced Last Online: Yesterday 03:55 PM Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: The land of milking honeys
Posts: 3,111
| 1. Browse to and open the media file. There are two panes at the lower end of the MediaCoder window. Each pane has a number of tabs you can switch between. The left hand pane is for general settings, the right hand pane is for specific codec settings. Since the video part of your flick already works there is no reason to convert that. To not convert the video, click on the Video tab in the left hand pane. Tick the box next to 'Copy video'. Most other options on the tab will now grey out, except Container. Keep the same container as in the original file (presumably AVI). 2. Click on the 'Audio' tab in the left hand pane. As encoder, pick LAME MP3 (I hope you have access to it in Linux - if not I guess you will be told so and will have to pick another option... only if so, I wouldn't know which one Make sure Copy Audio, External File and Normalize are not ticked. 3. On the right hand pane, click on the tab LAME MP3. Preset: Custom. Rate Mode: CBR. Channel: Auto. Bitrate: 128 Kbps (this is usually enough, but a little on the low side for clear dialogues). If the original audio bitrate is higher, choose the higher value. 4. Click on the tab 'Picture' on the left hand pane. Make sure that you set the frame rate for the video to the same value as the original. This is important because if you have a 23.976 frames per second frame rate, and the program sets a 25 fps frame rate for the re-encoded file, you will see the video stuttering, especially noticeable on panoramic shots. Also, subs and audio may go out of synch if the wrong frame rate is set. That should be it as far as the media settings are concerned... 5. Browse to your desired Output Folder where you want to save the re-encoded file (at the top of the MediaCoder window) by pressing the ... button. 5. Press the 'Start' button. Wait. 6. When finished, use MediaInfo or Avinaptic to compare the audio and video settings of the re-encoded file with the original file. If everything goes as planned, your audio stream will now be converted to a constant bitrate mp3 which your DVD player supports. |
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| | #17 (permalink) |
| punk douche bag Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: o dan y bryn
Posts: 28,059
| thanks for taking the time. i was pissing around with it earlier, it's an AC3 audio file that needs to be converted. I selected audio only and ended up with the same video file in the same format and a seperate audio MP3 file. no worries re Lame Mp3 in ubuntu. will give it another bash in the morning and let you know how it went. thanks a million. |
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| | #18 (permalink) | |
| punk douche bag Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: o dan y bryn
Posts: 28,059
| Thanks for the instructional frankie. it worked, cd all burned and abled. Quote:
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| LinkBack to this Thread: http://teakdoor.com/the-multimedia-forum/35281-thai-subtitle-torrents.html | |||
| Posted By | For | Type | Date |
| Subtitles! - Page 4 - Ajarn Forum - Living and Teaching In Thailand | This thread | Refback | 05-09-2009 08:56 PM |
| Subtitles! - Page 2 - Ajarn Forum - Living and Teaching In Thailand | This thread | Refback | 04-04-2009 06:01 PM |
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