Thanks again to the makers of this software for a great programme. I’ve actually given up looking for an answer on the internet. Anyone have the same problem? Thanks on the beforehand. And I can’t make head nor tails of google flash file because I don’t really understand how the translation function works. It would make more sense if it didn’t work at all. Then even if both subtitles are shown one above the other, they are both in English. Does anyone know why this is happening? What I don’t understand is that it begins translating but only does it for a couple of minutes. 3: The offline installer may be advantageous if your internet connection is. 2: Lumen may be installed on a PC in the field when there is no internet connectivity. Therefore, you wont need to download anything more for installation other than the original installation file. The test button didn’t work and I’m not sure what this was testing. 1: The standalone installation of Lumen is the offline installer. Then I tried to check the ‘google translate’ option clicking on the ‘test’, open file, reload application and login. I prevented all processes except for PotPlayer but this didn’t work. So I thought maybe if I limit the bandwidth of other programmes it Google translate would keep translating. Now, the only online reference I could find is that in a recent update it said “online subtitle translation” would not ‘browse slowly’ in the new version. I’ve set the source language as English and the translation language as Dutch. But now for some reason it translates for about five minutes and then it stops. This is fantastic because you can’t always find Dutch translations on the subtitles websites. I used it to translate English to Dutch while I am watching. The online ‘google translate’ subtitle function used to work fine. I have one big problem, however, and I’ve tried searching for others with same issue but no one discusses it. It is the best media player I use and the most versatile. I'm not gonna try and find out the hard way. I say used to because I don't know if that's the case anymore. =) Oh and another thing: disabling "check for updates" has always been the way to go, because updating from within the program used to download and install a Korean version. If you are concerned the PotPlayer author knows what videos you are watching, maybe it's best to use Windows Media Player, oh wait. Adding entries in the hosts file of course blocks that, and eases your paranoia. Still its quite normal it "calls home" in my opinion. On the same page you will find almost 700 other skins, so if none of them are to your liking just stick with any old garbage dinosaur player you currently You do realize PotPlayer is the player for a Korean network which includes chat and all kinds of other things? The international version uses PotPlayerMini.exe which doesn't use any of that functionality. Again I will recommend the portable version here which has everything included, both 32 and 64 bits ( launcher by gbrao in this thread ) and with a sexy modern skin. I just wanted to let you know that your version results in an incomplete and severely crippled PotPlayer that doesn't play half the files it's supposed to and is probably more unstable than Miley Cyrus on a very bad day. Those files are oddly enough included in the videohelp version. Furthermore, unfortunately dvbsupport doesn't include the DirectX 9 files in their installers, so PotPlayer will cry about that in case the user doesn't have his DirectX 9 updated. The original and main site for PotPlayer, dvbsupport, have those codecs included in the installer. Those codecs are a separate download when installing PotPlayer using the videohelp version. I'd like to point out that the downloads you refer to ( from ) do NOT include FFmpeg, Libav and OpenCodec when extracting the setup files.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |