![]() ![]() If you have a family that took you in, giving you 4 additional brothers, bring the whole setup to your eldest brother. I’d go by the profile picture, but those are rarely the actual people. ![]() Lastly, based on name, details, and writing style. What exact steps, slowly and calmly, and detailed, did you take from beginning to end?Īnd same details on any other machine you have involved in the process. If you have a SSD and upgraded to High Sierra, then you may likely be using APFS, which has been glitchy. Some MacBook Air computers had a standard spinning mechanical hard drive. If you’re using High Sierra, then are you using a SSD drive? Is it formatted with HFS+ or APFS what is the exact brand and model number DVD drive that you are using? since MacBook Air computers do not have a built-in DVD drive. What exact operating system are you using? The exact version. The computer, which computer? Year, and model. Handbrake is a free and easy to use tool to convert video formats and also add subtitles to movies.Burn In permanent overlay of subtitles in videoDefault. So caution should always be taken to make sure you only get the software from the actual person who wrote it. What is the URL / website address that you downloaded handbrake and VLC from? There are a lot of download sites that inject malware into programs that they offer for downloading. If none of that is the problem, then we need specific details to try and help you. Or you need a Blu-ray player hooked up to your television. I believe from what I’m gathering, that if you are having trouble playing the DVD on a computer, and that you have a software problem going on with the computer.Īlso be aware that if the movie is on a Blu-ray Disc, then you need a Blu-ray player (which no Mac ever shipped with), and software that can play a Blu-ray. First thing I would try is playing the disc in a real DVD player that is directly connected to a television. neither handbrake or VLC can cause damage to your actual DVD disc. Then we can try to asses what happened.įirst. if you’re not joking, because at first glance I took this as sarcasm, then the first thing to do is calm down. This is a little tedious, but it's really a much better subtitle experience. This will work in many apps, like VLC I think, but not Apple's apps or the ATV.Īnyway, you can then use another app called "Subler" to re-encode the subtitles as a "real" subtitle track (Tx3g format). Most apps (and the ATV) can do a better job at rendering them, so I recommend NOT choosing Burned In and leaving the subtitles in a "soft" format. This is "easy" and the subtitles will always be there, in every app (because it's part of the video itself).īut, I've found HB's subtitle rendering to be a bit ugly. This puts the subtitles as an image on top of the original video. For foreign-language DVD's, select your language (English) as the source, and you can set the subtitles to "Burned In". I'm going to use English as an example here, but adjust if you're trying to do this for another language. But, maybe sure the stereo track is FIRST, or the iPad won't play it (in Apple's app). If you also want to play them on an Apple TV, etc, in surround-sound, include a second audio track (AC-3 passthru is usually the best here). If you also want to play your movies on your iPhone/iPad, you MUST include a stereo track. I think the iTunes preset includes this, but I wanted to highlight this important part. The hardest thing I found was getting surround-sound correct. ![]() You should be able to easily make files compatible with iTunes, VLC, etc. HB includes some Apple and iTunes presets. ![]()
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