![]() Getting tangled up in all the wires – watching a movie shouldn’t be an Olympic sport.Glasses are attached to wires that are attached to a box, which you wear around your neck. These smart glasses display the subtitles as the action happens. This is especially frustrating when the movie is at a pinnacle point.Ĭaptioning smart glasses: Words pop-up on a pair of wide tinted glasses, usually on the bottom. Some theatres forget to charge their devices, so you run out of juice and the closed captions turn off completely.Like with most technologies, you’ll inevitably have moments when you have to get up and find someone to fix your device for you, which could result in you missing a large section of the movie. ![]() Closed captions don’t show up straight away on the screen, so you might have a slight delay in trying to follow the plot.The screen then displays the captions and you can adjust the coil type handle to where you want to see the closed captions. You then place the mirror in your cup holder and adjust until you’re able to see the subtitles, now the right way around, reflected.Ĭlosed caption stands: A small, rectangular LED screen is attached to a long flexible pole which you can insert into your cup holder. The subtitles are screened in the back of the room backwards. The mirror: Reminiscent of old-school spy style, some cinemas provide deaf moviegoers with a mirror. Many movie theatres in America carry closed captioning devices, and hopefully so will ours in the next few years.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |