- Use live captions to better understand audio - Microsoft Support
Live captions helps everyone, including people who are deaf or hard of hearing, better understand audio by providing automatic transcription To make more content accessible to more people, live captions now has the ability to provide translations and will turn any audio that passes through your PC into a single English-language caption experience
- Use live captions in Microsoft Teams meetings
To learn how to use CART captions in a Microsoft Teams meeting, refer to Use CART captions in a Microsoft Teams meeting (human generated captions) Teams has built-in closed captioning you can turn on from the meeting controls
- Present with real-time, automatic captions or subtitles in PowerPoint
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
- Create closed captions for a video - Microsoft Support
In PowerPoint for Windows, macOS, and web, you can create closed caption files and add them to the videos or audio files in your presentations Adding subtitles makes your presentation accessible to a wider audience, including people with hearing impairments and people who speak other languages
- Use CART captions in a Microsoft Teams meeting (human generated . . .
CART is also sometimes called open captioning, real-time stenography, or real-time captioning As a meeting organizer, you can set up and offer CART captioning to your audience instead of the Microsoft Teams built-in live captions that are automatically generated
- Add, format, or delete captions in Word - Microsoft Support
Manage captions for pictures, tables, equations, and other objects in your documents
- View, edit, and manage video transcripts and captions
Captions help make your video easier to consume for people who are deaf or hard-of-hearing, are playing your video in a noisy environment, or have diverse levels of language ability Help viewers quickly find content relevant to them with a transcript in the web player
- Change caption settings - Microsoft Support
Captions let you read the words spoken in the audio portion of a video, TV show, or movie To define how the captions appear in Windows and some Windows apps, you can select one of the predefined caption options or customize an option to better suit your needs Select (Start) > Settings > Accessibility > Captions
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