A downside to using the built-in live captioning with Office 365 is that the captions only appear in the PowerPoint you are presenting, and no other files or browser windows during your lecture.You can choose to have the captions appear below or above the slide, and have your captions translated to another language by choosing a different subtitle language. After it opens, click on slide show, and click on “always use subtitles”. After clicking on PowerPoint, you can start a new presentation or upload a presentation you already have. If you will be using live videos instead of recorded videos, Office 365 has a built-in live captioning feature if you use PowerPoint.Verbit (link) has live captioning services designed for distance learning and ease of scheduling.ĬUNY faculty and staff have access to Office 365 you login with your CUNYFirst username and CUNYFirst password. Likelye one of the most affordable options, currently user account-based ($240/year/user). Otter does live transcription in Zoom but it not yet integrated in other platforms (though it can still transcribe from the computer speakers). Use live captions in a live event (link).
Use live captions in a Teams meeting (link) Fortunately, like Cisco’s Webex, Zoom offers a streamlined live captioning solution to help ensure that the information exchanged during its Meetings, Chats, and Video Webinars can be easily shared with any participants who may be deaf, hard-of-hearing, or speak a different language.Quality Transcription Specialist (link).Rev Live Captioning Beta for Zoom (link).Enabling Closed Captions (someone must caption by hand) (link).The Webex Webinar feature is aimed not only at allowing you to conduct.