WEBVTT kind: captions lang: en NOTE This VTT file includes a few extras: - Meta data at the top (lines 2 and 3) - The current comment block, identified with NOTE and surrounded by spaces - cue settings at the end of the first timestamp - A cue span at the start of the second cue payload - (in this case, a "voice span" identifying the speaker) - A WebVTT cue settings list after the timestamp at 39.132 - Currently AblePlayer does not support these extra features - but the parser needs to be able to filter them out - - Added on April 1, 2015 for testing purposes (these are both valid): - A cue block with no content - Multiple line breaks between some cue blocks - - More info in the WebVTT spec (still evolving): - http://dev.w3.org/html5/webvtt 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:00.429 00:00:00.429 --> 00:00:09.165 [ music ] 00:00:09.165 --> 00:00:10.792 You want these people. 00:00:10.792 --> 00:00:13.759 They order your products, sign up for your services, 00:00:13.759 --> 00:00:16.627 enroll in your classes, read your opinions, 00:00:16.627 --> 00:00:18.561 and watch your videos. 00:00:18.561 --> 00:00:24.165 You'll never see them, but they know you- through your website. 00:00:24.165 --> 00:00:25.891 Or maybe not. 00:00:25.891 --> 00:00:30.396 Your website's visitors aren't a faceless mass of identical mouse-clickers 00:00:30.396 --> 00:00:32.363 but a vibrant community of individuals 00:00:32.363 --> 00:00:35.297 with varying tastes, styles, and abilities. 00:00:35.297 --> 00:00:39.132 This includes people with disabilities. 00:00:39.132 --> 00:00:41.000 position:10%,start align:start size:35% [Terrill] It's important for web designers and developers 00:00:41.000 --> 00:00:45.500 to realize that what they see currently on their computer, 00:00:45.500 --> 00:00:49.264 at their resolution, with their browser and their operating system 00:00:49.264 --> 00:00:52.000 is not going to be necessarily the same thing that everybody else sees.