ccextractor




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All ccextractor versions from Softpedia sources and versions


ccextractor

  • OS: Windows All
  • Version: 0.73
  • File size: 688 KB
  • Date Added: 2014-21-08
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ccextractor Description

ccextractor is a small, yet powerful tool which was developed specifically to help people extract closed captions from movies, so that you can have subtitles on your computer. After a quick and uneventful installation process, you come face to face with a fairly cluttered interface. It is built with several tabs, which will enable you to browse through all options available with ease. This software program supports, at export, a large number of file types, including SRT, SAMI, TXT, TTML, RAW and BIN. Aside from that, there are many configurations you can adjust. To be more accurate, you can delay subtitles, choose encoding type, add color information or not, establish text position, apply particular capitalization rules and keep original type setting tags. There are also many input options you can tinker with, so that you can get only the best results. It is possible to automatically detect the format you have imported or select it from a list (MP4, DVR-MS, RAW, BIN, WTV etc.), specify split type, input start and end time of processing, fix incorrect padding data and establish clock type (automatic, GOP, PTS).Furthermore, you can add a custom text as start and end credits, write elementary stream to a file, enable XDS debug traces, print debug information about the analyzed elementary video stream, and output Program Association Table contents. CPU and memory usage is insignificant, the interface is simple-to-use, the environment encloses enough options to keep you busy, the response time is good and therefore, we can safely say ccextractor is an efficient piece of software. �.You can free download ccextractor from Softpedia now.
Source: Softpedia

CCExtractor

  • OS: FREE
  • Version: 0.68
  • File size:
  • Date Added: 2013-29-12
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CCExtractor Description

CCExtractor is an open source, totally free, portable and very fast command-line software that acts as a closed captions extractor utility for MPEG and H264 files.In other words, the CCExtractor software lets you rip the raw closed captions (read: subtitles) data from a number of video type sources, such as DVDs or replay TV.At the moment, CCExtractor supports American TV captions (CEA-608 and CEA-708), as well as Teletext based European subtitles.CCExtractor is a platform-independent application that supports Linux, Apple Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows operating systems. What's New in This Release: [ read full changelog ]This version adds UDP multicast support, bugfixes, and some minor features. �.You can free download CCExtractor from Softpedia now.
Source: Softpedia

ccextractor

  • OS: Windows All
  • Version: 0.66
  • File size: 902 KB
  • Date Added: 2013-05-07
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ccextractor Description

ccextractor is a fast, easy to use closed captions extractor for MPEG files and not only. Supports HDTV transport streams, DVD and Replay TV.In short ccextractor is a small program that processes MPEG 2 files and extracts closed captions data to generate subtitle files.You can use this program to create .srt (subtitles) files for your TV captures, have transcripts so you can edit subtitles, etc. You can pass as many input files as you need. They will be processed in order.Output will be one single file (either raw or srt). Use this if you made yourrecording in several cuts (to skip commercials for example) but you want onesubtitle file with contiguous timing.What's the point of generating separate files for subtitles, if they are already in the source file?There are several reasons to have subtitles separated from the video file, including:· Closed captions never survive MPEG processing. If you take a MPEG file and encode it to any format (such as divx), your result file will not have closed captions. This means that if you want to keep the subtitles, you need to keep the original file. This is hardly practical if you are archiving HDTV shows for example.· Subtitles files are small - so small (around 250 Kb for a movie) that you can quickly download them, or email them, etc, in case you have a recording without subtitles.· Subtitles files are indexable: You can have a database with all your subtitles if you want (there are many available), so you can search the dialogs.· Subtitles files are a de-facto standard: Almost every player can use them. In fact, many setbox players accept subtitles files in .srt format - so you can have subtitles in your divx movies and not just in your original DVDs.· Closed captions are stored in many different formats by capture cards. Upgrading to a new card, if it comes with a new player, may mean that you can't use your previously recorded closed captions, even if the audio/video are fine.· Closed captions require a closed caption decoder. All US TV have one (it's a legal requirement), but no European TV does, since there are not closed captions in Europe (teletext is used instead). Basically this means that if you buy a DVD in the US which has closed captions but no DVD subtitles, you are out of luck. This is a problem with many (most) old TV shows DVDs, which only come with closed captions. DVD producers don't bother doing DVD subs, since it's another way to segment the market, same as with DVD regions.What kind of files can I extract closed captions from?CCExtractor currently handles:· DVDs.· Most HDTV captures (where you save the Transport Stream).· Captures where captions are recorded in bttv format. The number of cards that use this card is huge. My test samples came from a Hauppage PVR-250. You can check the complete list here.· DVR-MS (microsoft digital video recording).Usually, if you record a TV show with your capture card and CCExtractor produces the expected result, it will work for your all recordings. If it doesn't, which means that your card uses a format CCExtractor can't handle, please contact me and we'll try to make it work.The portable version of the software can be found here. What's New in This Release: [ read full changelog ] · Changed Window GUI size (larger). · Added Teletext options to GUI. · Added -teletext to force teletext mode even if not detected · Added -noteletext to disable teletext detection. This can be needed for streams that have both 608 data and teletext packets if you need to process the 608 data (if teletext is detected it will take precedence otherwise). · Added -datapid to force a specific elementary stream to be used for data (bypassing detections). · Added -ru2 and -ru3 to limit the number of visible lines in roll-up captions (bypassing whatever the broadcast says). · Added support for a .hex (hexadecimal) dump of data. · Added support for wtv in Windows. This is done by using a new program (wtvccdump.exe) and a new DirectShow filter (CCExtractorDump.dll) that process the .wtv using DirecShow's filters and export the line 21 data to a .hex file. The GUI calls wtvccdump.exe as needed. · Added --nogoptime to force PTS timing even when CCExtractor would use GOP timing otherwise. �.You can free download ccextractor from Softpedia now.
Source: Softpedia

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