No.
You would need to download the video and add subtitles using software designed for editing.
On the other hand, if you are talking about television or movies; most contain closed captioning options, even if they do not have subtitles. Most televisions or playback machines have the option to turn on CC. CC quality is generally lower than subtitles, but better than nothing.
Regardless of the source, whatever you are playing needs to contain the CC or subtitle info in order for your player or television to activate it, or you will need to create it for yourself through an editing program.
No device can display subtitles or CC if they do not exist in the recorded data already.
If you want to permanently add subtitles to the video, you will burn the subtitles into the video image. You can use a free program like Free HD Video Converter Factory to do it. Add your video to the program > select output format > hardcode subtitles > export the file.
You can find subtitles for "Los hombres de Paco" on various streaming platforms that offer the show, such as Amazon Prime Video or Netflix, where subtitles are often available in multiple languages. Additionally, subtitle websites like Subscene or OpenSubtitles provide user-uploaded subtitles in various languages. Always ensure that any subtitles you download comply with copyright laws.
That would be dependent on your device. It will show any video signal ported to the HDMI port.
You need a device that captures, compresses it and broadcasts video over Ethernet. You can connect the Epiphan's VGA Broadcaster device to the video source and organize a high quality broadcast for any audience.
My favorite video games are lego star wars and lego lord of the ring.
There are many videos on YouTube which have Melt with English subtitles. I haven't been able to find any lyrics without the video, though.
You ca try here http://www.all4divx.com/subtitles/Body+Of+Lies/any/1
Any subtitles are added by the broadcasting station prior to transmission - NOT the tv set itself !
For now they are not available.
Video input is the motion pictures that are entered into the computer. For video input, video camera or any other video device is connected to a video capture card. the video captured card converts the analog video signals into digital signals that a computer can store and process.
You cannot connect a green screen to your computer, green screens do not have any cables or hardware connections, but you can capture video of a green screen to a computer. To do this you need a video camera, a video capture device, and video editing software. You would connect the video camera to your video capture device, and the device to your computer. You would then open up your video editing program, tell it to capture from your device, and hit record on your video camera. Once you are done recording you would tell the program to stop capturing footage, and then save out the captured footage as whatever file type you want to composite with. Note: a video capture device may not be required if your video camera (and computer) supports either a fire-wire or USB connection.
Yes you can transfer video files onto the SDHC card and watch it with any computer, TV or electronic device with a SDHC slot.