![]() What I'm trying to do is encode a subtitle file onto an MP4 file, and load it onto a NAS to stream over my network to my TV (either to a smart TV or to a game console), plus streaming over the network to a mobile device, so I basically need it to be a simple MP4 file with hardcoded subs, so that all the server has to do is provide the file, and all the client has to do is play back the file, and I can understand whatever is being said in non-english portions of the video. Needed a replacement for PC ShareManager from Samsung as that doesn't support playing content off an External drive and using Symbolic links to fool it has at times made the entire storage subsystem to freeze forcing me to do a hard reset. You can use MKV Extract to get the subs out. SRT (or other subtitle file) in the same directory as the video. Similarly, UMS ( ) touts subtitle support which works provided that you have a separate. Thankfully, there is wi-fi enabled mouse.keyboard control for android phones. If I really wanted to playback anime on the TV (much of them are 10-bit encodes now), I would have to hook it up the laptop to the TV. Plus, you PC needs to be fast and so does your network as it does the transcoding on the fly, so it will be resource heavy on your PC. Used to use VLC quite a bit but had some quirky usability issues which made me move to MPHC.ĮDIT: If you want to playback to a PS3 (assuming you have one), there is software called PS3 Media Server ( ) but I had to do a lot of tinkering around to get subs shown from the PS3. I usually had it all untouched, nothing downscaled and only had the subtitles captured to be hardcoded.ĭo note however that (at least in my case) 10-bit encodes that have the softsubs won't appear after transcoding to whatever container you use, will only work with 8-bit encodes if you want the subtitles hardcoded.Īs for playback, no issues with MPHC+Klite Codec Pack (although MPCHC by itself will play a bunch of files without codec packs). You can use the built in Wizard to guide you on what you want, the options provided are a lot. Mediacoder was the best option that I found after many days looking. Before finding that software, I too was looking for ways to playback anime on my phone and beam it to my TV (sadly, after the last update from Samsung for my SGS2 *Rogers LTE Model*, that feature has been removed) with no worries of subtitle issues.
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