Closed Captioning In Web Video? 164
mforbes writes "Like many geeks, I enjoy watching TV, movies, and streamed video. However, in company with 2%-3% of the population, I suffer from a problem known as Central Auditory Processing Disorder, which essentially means that I have difficulty separating the sounds of human voices from various background noises. When watching TV and when watching movies at home, this isn't a problem, as I can simply turn on the closed captioning. (I find radio to be simply an annoyance.) How much effort would it take the major purveyors of Internet video (the broadcasting majors, etc.) to include an option for CCTV? I doubt the bandwidth required would be more than 1% of that required for the video already being presented. As a social libertarian, I would never ask for government regulation of such an enterprise; I ask only that the major studios be aware of the difficulties that those of us with auditory disorders face. If it's rough for me, how much more difficult can it be for someone who can't hear at all?"
we can't coddle the deaf (Score:-1, Funny)
let them pull themselves by their own bootstraps, and caption all their own video.
i suppose next you are going to want to make all video 'full screen' for people with bad eyes! thats what you liberals do,
tax and spend and waste the money of the hard working to benefit the slovenly lazy whiners that undermine our fatherland...
i mean.. uhh.. yeah. i mean our
thats the american way.
I don't know if it is a good idea. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:It absolutely sucks for deaf people (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, hang on...
Re:Hey (Score:3, Funny)
"Just get a Q-Tip. We don't need you to make up some disorder because you're too lazy to clean your ears."
[X] That's how I poked my eardrum out in the first place, you insensitive clod!