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Posted by Jaszmin on 10/18/05 09:47
The ultimate way to look at one of these movies
is to take in a black screen with only the captioning.
From there, one could imagine the rest. That might
be good for us.
Mike Rice
On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 12:19:38 -0700, WinField <doghouse@operamail.com>
wrote:
>DVDs would be great for someone with a hearing problem. Just turn on
>the subtitles - it works great. Some movies have scenes where it's hard
>to catch all the dialog. I'll repeat those with subtitles ON to see if
>the butler did it ...
>
> winf
>
>
>Diane wrote:
>> In article <bl2112-F17C3E.22114631082005@news.uswest.net>,
>> Black Locust <bl2112@hotmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>>But save the sarcasm. Recently I've
>>>>developed hearing problems and just don't watch much of anything any
>>>>more. It's not worth the investment at the moment.
>>>
>>>Can 35 bucks even be considered an investment? DVDs have been around for
>>>8 years. I think you can safely purchase a player now. :)
>>
>>
>> Yes, I know they've been around, and I have them in two computers, but
>> the point is -- I don't use the VCR; I wouldn't use the DVD. So it's not
>> worth $5, $35, or $50 to me. Someone twisted this into me arguing
>> against DVD, which I certainly never did.
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