I do transcription work, creating scripts out of interviews with multiple people from video files. It’s easy for the video editors to export the interviews to mp3 or wav audio files that have the embedded timecode (from the video) in the file. However, when I bring these files into Scrivener, the timecode disappears
Time code (from the video world) looks like:12:23:23:33
But the file might only say: 01:22
QuickTime 7 has the ability to read and display this embedded timecode.
This is hugely frustrating for the video editors as they have been having to burn .mov files that are basically just audio with the time-code running over a still image in the file. So I can see what the video time code is and include that in my transcriptions, which need to be very precise.
Is there a way to see this embedded timecode? Or is there a way to incorporate this feature? It would be great if Scrivener could become a more robust transcription software program as it’s great for writing …