![]() If you click on that you will now get a list of all the chapters here at the right. But also at the bottom here you have the name of the current chapter. You can Move the pointer as the video is playing to see what is in another part of the video and click to jump to it. You can drag the Playback Head to anywhere that you want. You can, of course, click anywhere you want in the Timeline. So you send this video, say, to an Apple TV or use some AirPlay Speakers to play the audio. On a Mac you're going to have AirPlay controls here. You saw all the controls here at the bottom. You can also go to Full Screen mode which just shows the video. You also have Theater mode which will keep you here on the page with all of the information and controls and comments and everything but it will take the video from side-to-side. If you want to get out of this you can click here to expand or here to dismiss the video. You can go to a miniplayer here and that puts the video at the bottom right and takes you to the YouTube homepage where you can continue to browse. Now you have a lot of different controls here for how the screen looks. YouTube should recognize the bandwidth that you've got and automatically go to a lower resolution if you can't use a higher resolution with your current bandwidth. The Auto Setting though should do this automatically. But I can choose a lower setting if I want to save bandwidth or if I notice I'm having trouble streaming at a higher bandwidth. In this case 4K is the quality of this video. So if you only see 1080p as the top that means that the video is that quality. Now the top one is going to be whatever the original video was uploaded as. You can click on this and see a list of video resolutions. Now another important setting here is Quality. Just a computer generated translation so it is not going to be perfect. So let's pick French and you could see the translation here. Not the autogenerated ones but you can translate say this one by going to Settings and then going to Subtitles and then select Autotranslate and then go to the language that you want. You can also translate regular transcripts. I believe it doesn't work for autogenerated text but here's one of my videos which has a regular transcript and you can see how I can search in here for some text and it will find it and you could see it bolded. You also usually have the ability to Search the transcript to find some text in the video. You can also click up here and toggle time stamp to get rid of the time stamp if you like. You can also click anywhere and it will jump right to that part of the video. You can scroll through it without having to view the video. This brings the transcript up here at the top right. If you click on the three dots button here under the video you'll get Show Transcript. Now there are also some hidden controls here. All sorts of things to get this to look just like you want. For instance you can change the Font, the Font color, the size, the background color. You can also go to Options here and there a ton of ways you can customize how this looks. Maybe one autogenerated by YouTube and another one professionally typed. You can also go here to further customize subtitles. I can click Custom here if I don't like those numbers and maybe go to 5% faster or 5% slower. But I could also choose something a little slower, like 75% or faster 125%. If I click in here I can choose Normal, which is 100% of the speed. For instance you can change the playback speed. There are a lot of things you can do here in the Settings. ![]() You've got a button here to turn on Captions or Subtitles. If you move your pointer over the timeline it will show you the name of each chapter as well as a preview of the frame that you're pointing at. Notice also the timeline is broken up into chapters. Then if the video has chapters you're going to see the Chapter Name that you're currently on right here. It also shows you the time that you're currently at, in this case 1 minute 26 seconds into a 9 minute 52 second video. You've got your Mute control and your Volume control here. You've got the button to go to the next video. ![]() So at the bottom you've got all of these controls here. This is what it may look like when you're watching a YouTube video in the Safari web browser on a Mac. There are lots of controls, some of them really well hidden, and lots of keyboard shortcuts to help you when you're watching YouTube videos. If you are using a Desktop or Laptop Mac you're watching them in a browser. So chances are you are watching this video at YouTube. Join us and get exclusive content and course discounts. There you can read more about the Patreon Campaign. MacMost is brought to you thanks to a great group of more than 1000 supporters. Let me show you some tips for watching YouTube videos. Video Transcript: Hi, this is Gary with.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |