And anything on YouTube belongs to US security agencies so SEP might work better for you, as it does for me. While free and a good subtitle creation tool, YouTube's subtitler is not as flexible as SEP though, especially if you delete the videos (it would mean reuploading everything to revise). Don't worry, your videos will never be public and you can delete them after creating the subtitles. If money is an issue, some of my colleagues have developed a method of using YouTube to create subtitled video. I don't have a recommendation for hard coding subtitles yet. Previous versions even run on old versions of OS X. The best application to mux soft subtitles is Subler which has existed for many years. Fortunately there's a much better freeware program. An additional $5 to $10 and it looks really awkward. To add soft subtitles, these same guys also have Subtitle Writer. If you'd prefer to soft add your subtitles (generally better for an Apple audience or those with current computers and AV players), it's not part of SEP. The hard burning of subtitles does not work in my version. To shorten a subtitle or lengthen it, you only need to pull the start or end bubble further along a visual audio waveform. You just drag and drop on a moving timeline. I thought it was a lot of money but after struggling with all the awkward java freeware, SEP is the only subtitle creation and editing tool which works at all intuitively in terms of synchronising words and text. I jumped and paid about $45 CAD for Subtitle Edit Pro. This caption editor allows you to add attractive and stylish text throughout your videos.
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