![]() ![]() ![]() Live Text makes it easy to pull that one word you don’t know from a block of text and quickly look up its definition. Point your camera at a long customer service number listed on a product or quickly at a lost pet poster and you can easily make a call. With Live Text, you can access phone numbers and addresses with your camera like you would on any website. But in testing out Live Text, I ran into plenty of situations where the feature made my life a bit easier. Sometimes quickly typing out text or snapping a photo of a flier is going to be all you need - no special intelligent device solution needed. Once you’ve highlighted the text you’d like to share properly, tap “Insert” to add it to your text in progress.Here you can highlight text as usual and pick what you’d like to capture. In the Live Text box, you can tap the icon in the bottom right-hand corner, exactly like you would using the Live Text directly through your camera. Don’t worry - you can change which portion of text you’d actually like to insert. ![]() In Messages, Live Text auto-captures text for some reason and will preview it immediately above in your iMessage.Point your camera at any text you’d like to share in a text. Live Text capture through your camera will come up on the bottom half of your screen.Tap the cursor to pull up additional input options.Open up a text message thread and tap on the text box at the bottom of your screen.Using Live Text directly in the Messages app is aa great way to quickly send along things like hand-written notes or shopping lists. Once you’ve finished, you can snap out of Live Text mode by tapping the icon again or the area behind the captured text.You can also hard press on the screenshot to select just a portion of the captured text, like you would on a website. Live Text will give you the choice to copy, select all, look up, translate, or share the pulled text.Once you tap the icon, Live Text pulls a screenshot of the selected text forward, giving you a better idea of what it can read.If this icon doesn’t show-up, you could be too far away from the text or it could be unreadable for Live Text. It looks like three lines of text between brackets. If the feature recognizes text, brackets will surround the text in your viewfinder and the Live Text icon will pop up in the bottom right-hand corner of your camera view.Books, signs, handwritten grocery lists, you name it. Point your camera at anything with text out in the world.And, finally, Adobe expanded transcription support to include Danish.Whenever text is identified by your camera, you can select it with Live Text and take aa variety of actions. Now, Premiere’s autosave happens in the background, so it doesn’t disrupt your workflow. While auto-save has always been an essential feature, it would always pop up in front of your project while you’re working, taking you away from your work every time it saved. There are several other more quality of life improvements in the latest version of Premiere. It’s a minor change, but a welcome one! Adobe also added support for cinematic clips shot on iPhone’s cinema mode. Adobe improved support for Apple Trackpads and the Magic Mouse, leading to smoother scrolling. While text-based editing was by far the largest feature this release, there are a few other improvements for those in the Apple ecosystem. Mouse improvements, iPhone cinematics & more The product from the text-based editing will still require some fine tuning for the exact timing, in addition to all your usual audio and color improvement and adding B-Roll, but it can be a massive time-saver when working through lots of footage. ![]()
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