Thursday, May 7, 2020

Tribeca partners with AT&T and IMAX to launch summer movie drive-in series

Tribeca partners with AT&T and IMAX to launch summer movie drive-in series
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Android's real-time captioning feature, Live Caption, could be coming to Google's Chrome browser on computers and to Chrome OS, as spotted by TechDows (via 9to5Google). In the latest Deserted remission of Chrome, there's a way to crawlway a new "Live Caption" toggle in the browser's convenience settings.

However, in a few news of testing, I wasn't stalwart to get Live Captions to work at all. I switched the Live Extras toggle on, except whenever I navigated to YouTube or Vanguard to see captions on a video, the browser immediately crashed. That's not too surprising, though -- Deserted is Google's updated-nightly adaptation of Chrome intended pigeonholed for developers, and the visitor even warns that the browser "can be unstable."

If you appetite to try to test Live Extras on Chrome for yourself, though, here's what you hypothesize to do:

  1. Download the latest adaptation of Chrome Canary.
  2. Open it up and enter chrome://flags in the confront bar.
  3. On the Flags page, annal fuzz to "Live Captions" and click the drop-down, and weeded "Enabled."
  4. Then go to Chrome's settings menu, blazon "accessibility" into the settings search bar, and click the toggle in the Live Extras journal that appears.

If you appetite to try a steadfast adaptation of Live Caption, the humaneness is bettering now in Android 10 on Pixel 4, 3A, 3, and 2 phones, and "selected over-and-above Android phones," according to Google. My colleague Dieter Bohn was impressed with Live Extras when he got to try it out aftermost year, and you can get an idea of how it works on Android phones in this promotional video from Google.

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