![]() With this arrangement, you cant have BOTH the forced and non-forced showing at the same time (this is not what you want). With sub 2 selected = only the forced stuff shows first assistant camera 'a 'camera, LA unit Craig Nix. ![]() first assistant camera: USA Larry Nielsen. digital imaging technician: additional photography Pete Nash. With sub 1 selected = only the non-forced stuff shows first assistant camera: USA (as Serge Nofield) Tim Nagasawa. If you put the forced stuff as sub 2 and the non-forced stuff at 1, then this will happen: If you select subtitle 2 (the subtitle with non-forced subs), these will show AS WELL as the FORCED subtitle from the top most subtitle (in this case, the forced subs). Then when playing the movie, with no subs selected, FORCED subtitle 1 will auto play, regardless whether subtitles are on or off. say the english FORCED stream and english NON-FORCED stream, make sure FORCED is at the top and the non-forced stream is at #2. and it is forced on even if you select subtitle 2 or 3. Only forced streams from the top most subtitle is FORCED on. Before they were archenemies, they were closest of friends, working together, with other Mutants (some familiar, some new), to stop the greatest threat the world has ever known. Thank you in advance for any help!Īlso, if you mux a FORCED stream into your iso package, make sure the FORCED subtitle stream is right at the top. Before Charles Xavier and Erik Lensherr took the names Professor X and Magneto, they were two young men discovering their powers for the first time. Before Charles Xavier and Erik Lensherr took the names Professor X and Magneto, they were two young men discovering their powers for the first time. Witness the moment that will change our world. After trying all three possible xsettings with this movie out of sheer boredom, I still have no forced subs in the opening sequence which is spoken in German.Īside from a solution, it'd be helpful to know for future reference why this happens on some movies but not others, and if there is a way to foresee this problem and correct it without the slower trial-and-error process. AKA: X-Men: Première classe, I:, X-Men First Class, X-Men: Primeira Classe, X-Men: Primera generación. Professor Charles Xavier, who owns a school for young mutants, sends Storm and Cyclops to bring them back before it is too late. I've always left the "Force Subtitles" box completely filled in to turn subs on/off dynamically based on presence of forced subs. In a world where both Mutants and Humans fear each other, Marie, better known as Rogue, runs away from home and hitches a ride with another mutant, known as Logan, a.k.a. The latest of these movies is X-Men First Class. But I recently began to realize that in *some* of my movies, there are no forced subtitles where there should be. It's been a near perfect system and worked flawlessly for my entire BD collection. I keep one audio track and the english subs. Ordinarily, I rip my blu rays to movie-only ISO format, using ClownBD. I've searched the forum extensively and found topics semi relevent to this issue, but no direct instructions for how to deal with this:
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(Screenshot: ) Evaluating startup entriesįor each entry in the list, ask yourself: Here’s a shorter list from one of my example Windows 11 machines. The key is not what’s on my list, but how to evaluate what’s on yours. You may have fewer - or perhaps even more. Yes, I’m a “power user” and have many, many entries in my Startup. ![]() Here’s an image of what I see when I run it on my primary Windows 11 Pro system. (In prior versions of Windows, you can run the “msconfig” utility for a similar list.) Right-click on the Start menu, click on Task Manager, click on More details, if present, and then click on the Startup tab. The first place to turn to 1 is the Startup tab in Task Manager. ![]() Instead, I’ll give you an overview of the steps I take to manage my startup. Everyone uses their computer in different ways. There is no “minimum set” of startup programs I can list here that would work for everyone.Įvery machine is different, everyone has different software installed, and everyone has different ideas of what is and is not important. ![]() In the long run, the return is usually not worth the effort. It’s safest to leave startup items turned on otherwise, but experimenting is also safe. If the software has its own “run on startup” setting, turn that off. If you don’t need the software at all, consider uninstalling it completely. Which ones you can turn off depends on what you use and need, as well as the design of the software. Windows Task Manager will show you the list of programs that start automatically when you sign in. |