NCI
HOME ABOUT US Support Us Client Support CONTACT US
CAPTIONING AUTO CAPTIONING CAPTION INTEGRATION FEATURED NEWS REQUEST A QUOTE DONATE DID YOU KNOW
Our Services REQUEST A QUOTE Real-time Captioning Automated Captioning PRERECORDED CAPTIONS Recapd Web Captioning Live Captioning Translation Caption Integration Audio Description Spanish Captioning
Broadcast and Entertainment Internet/Web Education Corporations Government
Resources Intro Viewer FAQ NCI Client FAQ Captioning Terms Educational Uses Public Policy State of ASR History of CC Job Openings
HOMEABOUT US Services Our Services REQUEST A QUOTE Real-time Captioning Automated Captioning PRERECORDED CAPTIONS Recapd Web Captioning Live Captioning Translation Caption Integration Audio Description Spanish Captioning Industry Broadcast and Entertainment Internet/Web Education Corporations Government Support UsClient Support RESOURCES Resources Intro Viewer FAQ NCI Client FAQ Captioning Terms Educational Uses Public Policy State of ASR History of CC Job Openings CONTACT US
NCI
CAPTIONINGAUTO CAPTIONINGCAPTION INTEGRATIONFEATURED NEWSREQUEST A QUOTEDONATEDID YOU KNOW
 1970 – The National Bureau of Standards and ABC experiment with digitally encoding precise time information into a portion of the television signal.  The experiment fails, but it inspires an idea to send captions enclosed in the television signal.
 1970 – The National Bureau of Standards and ABC experiment with digitally encoding precise time information into a portion of the television signal.  The experiment fails, but it inspires an idea to send captions enclosed in the television signal.

1970 – The National Bureau of Standards and ABC experiment with digitally encoding precise time information into a portion of the television signal. The experiment fails, but it inspires an idea to send captions enclosed in the television signal.

 1971 – At the first National Conference on Television for the Hearing Impaired, two possible technologies for captioning television programs debut.  Both display captions only on specially equipped TV sets.

1971 – At the first National Conference on Television for the Hearing Impaired, two possible technologies for captioning television programs debut. Both display captions only on specially equipped TV sets.

 1972 – On February 15, an exciting demonstration occurs at Gallaudet College (now University.)  With the use of a specially equipped TV set, The National Bureau of standards presents closed captions embedded within the normal broadcast of “The Mod S

1972 – On February 15, an exciting demonstration occurs at Gallaudet College (now University.) With the use of a specially equipped TV set, The National Bureau of standards presents closed captions embedded within the normal broadcast of “The Mod Squad,” proving the viability of closed captioning. Nonetheless, closed captioning is still in its early experimental stage.

 1972 – “The French Chef” with Julia Child was the first open captioned program to air, meaning that the captions appear to everyone watching and cannot be turned off.

1972 – “The French Chef” with Julia Child was the first open captioned program to air, meaning that the captions appear to everyone watching and cannot be turned off.

 1973 – ABC begins rebroadcasting “World News Tonight,” also with open captions  5 hours after it originally airs. It is the only timely newscast accessible to the deaf and hard of hearing audience.

1973 – ABC begins rebroadcasting “World News Tonight,” also with open captions 5 hours after it originally airs. It is the only timely newscast accessible to the deaf and hard of hearing audience.

 1973 – The federal government funds further development and testing of closed captioning, meaning captions could be turned on and off.  The engineering department of the Public Broadcast System starts the project under contact to the Bureau of Educa

1973 – The federal government funds further development and testing of closed captioning, meaning captions could be turned on and off. The engineering department of the Public Broadcast System starts the project under contact to the Bureau of Education for the Handicapped of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.

 1973 – WETA in Washington, D.C. successfully tests the closed captioning system using line 21 of the television signal.

1973 – WETA in Washington, D.C. successfully tests the closed captioning system using line 21 of the television signal.

 1976 – The FCC reserves line 21 of the television signal for the transmission of closed captions. With the FCC’s approval, PBS engineers innovate the caption editing consoles that would be used to caption prerecorded programs, the encoding equipment

1976 – The FCC reserves line 21 of the television signal for the transmission of closed captions. With the FCC’s approval, PBS engineers innovate the caption editing consoles that would be used to caption prerecorded programs, the encoding equipment that broadcasters would use to add captions to their programs, and prototype decoders.

 1979 – PBS realized that securing the cooperation of commercial television networks requires a nonprofit, single-purpose organization with a specific mission to perform the captioning. Hence, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare inaugurat

1979 – PBS realized that securing the cooperation of commercial television networks requires a nonprofit, single-purpose organization with a specific mission to perform the captioning. Hence, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare inaugurated the National Captioning Institute (NCI). NCI’s mandate is to promote and provide access to television programs for the deaf and hard-of-hearing audience through closed captioning technology.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Previous Next
 1970 – The National Bureau of Standards and ABC experiment with digitally encoding precise time information into a portion of the television signal.  The experiment fails, but it inspires an idea to send captions enclosed in the television signal.
 1971 – At the first National Conference on Television for the Hearing Impaired, two possible technologies for captioning television programs debut.  Both display captions only on specially equipped TV sets.
 1972 – On February 15, an exciting demonstration occurs at Gallaudet College (now University.)  With the use of a specially equipped TV set, The National Bureau of standards presents closed captions embedded within the normal broadcast of “The Mod S
 1972 – “The French Chef” with Julia Child was the first open captioned program to air, meaning that the captions appear to everyone watching and cannot be turned off.
 1973 – ABC begins rebroadcasting “World News Tonight,” also with open captions  5 hours after it originally airs. It is the only timely newscast accessible to the deaf and hard of hearing audience.
 1973 – The federal government funds further development and testing of closed captioning, meaning captions could be turned on and off.  The engineering department of the Public Broadcast System starts the project under contact to the Bureau of Educa
 1973 – WETA in Washington, D.C. successfully tests the closed captioning system using line 21 of the television signal.
 1976 – The FCC reserves line 21 of the television signal for the transmission of closed captions. With the FCC’s approval, PBS engineers innovate the caption editing consoles that would be used to caption prerecorded programs, the encoding equipment
 1979 – PBS realized that securing the cooperation of commercial television networks requires a nonprofit, single-purpose organization with a specific mission to perform the captioning. Hence, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare inaugurat
 
 
NCI logo
 
NCI
14801 Murdock Street, Suite 210 ,
Chantilly, VA 20151 ,
United States
(703) 917-7600 marketing@ncicap.org
Hours
HomeAbout UsServicesClient SupportResourcesCaptioningFeatured NewsCaption IntegrationAudio DescriptionSpanishCareersViewer FAQNCI Client FAQRequest a QuoteDid You KnowTestimonialsNCI BLOG
Donate
Support Us Our Donors
Privacy PolicyContact Us

Getting started is easy. Use our online form or call us at 703-917-7600.

© 2020 National Captioning Institute. All rights reserved.

 
cdc_logo tag.png