Autoplay Max For Live

2 views
Skip to first unread message

Debora Mccaffery

unread,
Aug 5, 2024, 12:05:10 AM8/5/24
to izveheartnex
Ihave just learned that YouTube live stream URL is randomly changing. I found this on stackoverflow "YouTube Live Streaming embed code keeps changing"so I know the the static embed link is this _stream?channel=[channel ID]

How do I stop the random music videos and shows Auto playing on the home screen for Samsung smart TVs. I just got the Samsung Q60R and every time I turn the TV on or switch apps I have to hear random music videos play.


To disable, I pressed on the home button on the remote, then arrow-ed over to the Samsung TV app icon, then pressed the down direction, which gave me "remove" and "disable" options. Selecting disable did the trick.


Now it's trying to autoplay the Live TV app, which has nothing hooked up. I'd imagine you could get a similar result to me with some experimentation, landing on an app that doesn't have anything to autoplay, which would at least get the TV to shut up.


hope, someone with the same iPhone model as yours will jump in. On my iPhone X with iOs 13.1 all Live Photos will auto play, but only in the large thumbnails in the Days view or when I open the photo to view it enlarged.


Have same issue on my 11 pro. It was the first thing I noticed after switching from Android and knowing that my wifes SE does it fine (I really like the effect of autoplay, on Samsung I had to activate it per photo manually).


Found the reason of this bug. It's "Capture Outside the Frame" mode. If you disable it - all newly registered photos will autoplay. This mode is broken - it not only disables Live Photo autoplay - it also disables newly added Deep Fusion (with Capture Outside the Frame deep fusion is deactivated).


We encourage creators to add professional captions first. If automatic captions are available, they'll automatically be published on the video. Automatic captions may not be ready at the time that you upload a video. Processing time depends on the complexity of the video's audio.


YouTube is constantly improving its speech recognition technology. But automatic captions might misrepresent the spoken content due to mispronunciations, accents, dialects, or background noise. Always review automatic captions and edit any parts that haven't been properly transcribed.


Automatic captions for live streams are currently being rolled out to English channels. These channels are streaming at "normal latency" with professional captions unavailable. We encourage creators to use professional captions first. Learn about live caption requirements.


After the live stream ends, live automatic captions won't remain on the video. New automatic captions will be generated based on the VOD process, and may be different from the ones that appeared during the live stream.


You can make a YouTube video/live stream autoplay in fullscreen on your playlist by following the steps below however due to YouTube policies the video will now need to be muted. Please note this does not work for every video as it may be restricted by the channel itself. You can also un-mute the video manually as shown at the bottom.


PowerPoint for Microsoft 365 can transcribe your words as you present and display them on-screen as captions in the same language you are speaking, or as subtitles translated to another language. This can help accommodate individuals in the audience who may be deaf or hard of hearing, or more familiar with another language, respectively.


You can choose which language you want to speak while presenting, and which language the caption/subtitle text should be shown in (i.e. if you want it to be translated). You can select the specific microphone you want to be used (if there is more than one microphone connected to your device), the position where the subtitles appear on the screen (bottom or top, and overlaid or separate from slide), and other display options.


Use Spoken Language to see the voice languages that PowerPoint can recognize, and select the one you want. This is the language that you will be speaking while presenting. (By default, this will be set to the language corresponding to your Office editing language.)


Use Subtitle Language to see which languages PowerPoint can display on-screen as captions or subtitles, and select the one you want. This is the language of the text that will be shown to your audience. By default, this will be the same language as your Spoken Language, but it can be a different language, meaning that translation will occur.


In the Subtitle Settings menu, set the desired position of the captions or subtitles. They can appear over the top or bottom margin of the slide (overlaid), or they can appear above the top or below the bottom of the slide (docked). The default setting is Below Slide.


If you're in the middle of giving a presentation and want to turn the feature on or off, click the Toggle Subtitles button from Slide Show View or Presenter View, on the toolbar below the main slide:


To have subtitles always start up when a Slide Show presentation starts, from the ribbon you can navigate to Slide Show > Always Use Subtitles to turn this feature on for all presentations. (By default, it's off.) Then, in Slide Show and Presenter View, a live transcription of your words will appear on-screen.


Use Spoken Language to see the voice languages that PowerPoint can recognize, and select the one you want. This is the language that you will be speaking while presenting. (By default, this will be set to the language corresponding to your Office language.)


You can choose which language you want to speak while presenting, and which language the caption/subtitle text should be shown in (i.e., if you want it to be translated). You can also select whether subtitles appear at the top or bottom of the screen.


Use Spoken Language to see the voice languages that PowerPoint can recognize, and select the one you want. This is the language that you will be speaking while presenting. (By default, this will be set to the language corresponding to locale of your web-browser.)


Use Subtitle Language to see which languages PowerPoint can display on-screen as captions or subtitles, and select the one you want. This is the language of the text that will be shown to your audience. (By default, this will be the same language as your Spoken Language, but it can be a different language, meaning that translation will occur.)


Several spoken languages are supported as voice input to live captions & subtitles in PowerPoint for Microsoft 365. The languages marked as Preview are offered in advance of full support, and generally will have somewhat lower accuracy, which will improve over time.


PowerPoint live captions & subtitles is one of the cloud-enhanced features in Microsoft 365 and is powered by Microsoft Speech Services. Your speech utterances will be sent to Microsoft to provide you with this service. For more information, see Make Office Work Smarter for You.


Microsoft wants to provide the best possible experience for all our customers. If you have a disability or questions related to accessibility, please contact the Microsoft Disability Answer Desk for technical assistance. The Disability Answer Desk support team is trained in using many popular assistive technologies and can offer assistance in English, Spanish, French, and American Sign Language. Please go to the Microsoft Disability Answer Desk site to find out the contact details for your region.


Hi @andyjames because autoplay is restricted and all browsers require user interaction to give them the control if they want to see or hear video and/or audio (willing or health issue reasons) I was curious how you have got over this global autoplay restriction. I have tried your solution in Safari, Chrome, Firefox and you solution fails in all of them.


Also since I needed the video to play when a modal opened it is the desired behaviour as the user is clicking a play button on the page and then having to click play again on the video is not ideal UX. This also takes care of pausing the video when the user closes the modal.


With some more time I could maybe get it to work with the Webflow video element but based on the output when using this, Webflow adds a video iframe wrapper and then inside that iframe the video embed iframe is added. Therefore it needs javascript that will find the parent iframe and then inside that iframe find the vide iframe to trigger play and pause.


@Stan I think you are misunderstanding the implementation and reason for this need. I am well versed in UX and accessibility. This is not breaking any rules nor is it a concern to people with health issues.


HI @andyjames thanks for video now I finally get it All confusion was that you said that you have solution and post links with example that was not working (that was for me most confusing part) instead of posting working sample as you have in explanation video. Now I see that video is triggered with interaction.

3a8082e126
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages