by Kathryn Hill on January 26, 2011
mVideoPlayer is a free Android app that plays many different video formats and displays subtitle (.srt) files rather well. The interface is very clean and users have a lot of control over the subtitle size, position, font, and timing.
mVideoPlayer supports the following subtitle files: .srt, .ssa, .ass, .mpl, .smi, .txt, and .sub sami. There is also built-in subtitle search powered by OpenSubtitles.org, and users can download and pair a subtitle with a video in less than 10 seconds. This app supports many video formats but not .mov.
Behind the cut is a slide show of screen shots – take a look.
[click to continue…]
by Kathryn Hill on January 23, 2011

A recent conversation with an acquaintance from an internet community I frequent prompted me to write this post. He’s not deaf, but he works from home in a basement with headphones on, and often misses the doorbell being rung. He asked the community if it was possible to somehow have his doorbell alert him via Growl on OSX, and I thought this was a really great idea, so I’m throwing it out here. I did a lot of Googling, but didn’t come up with a solution. With the level of technical, hacker, and Burning Man expertise that can be drawn upon here, I am sure someone reading this can put something together.
Alert systems for the deaf are often expensive and bulky. Generally, the basic concept is that one has several central transmitters in various rooms of the house that are hooked up to a lamp. Extra transmitters hooked up to the doorbell, smoke alarm, motion detector, baby monitor, and intruder alarm send wireless signals to the central transmitters, and they will cause the lamps they are hooked into to flash, and in some cases, a bed to vibrate. In some cases, doorbell and smoke alarm systems have to be hard-wired and installed by a professional electrician. There are pager-sized accessories that one can attach to their belt that will send vibrations when a signal is received, but to me, that’s the equivalent of buying a kitchen unitasker like an avocado slicer. Why have extra gadgets? Why not hack the gadgets we currently have?
[click to continue…]