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Record Once, Export Again and Again One of the major unique features in Screenflick is the ability to export the original full-quality movie multiple times with different scales, qualities, and file formats, unlike other applications which record directly to a final movie format, which can negatively impact recording performance and sacrifice video quality. Using Screenflick, record a movie once and create small low quality movies, large high quality movies, and even export to different file formats, without having to use another program. Another great feature unique to Screenflick is the ability to test your export settings. Rather than picking some quality settings, exporting the entire movie, and hoping the result is what you wanted, use 'Quick Test' to export a short 15 second clip of the movie, verify the export settings are right where you want them to be, and then export the entire movie with confidence. Quick Test and exporting to ProRes require OS X 10.9 or later.
Not sure when this feature got added, but since this was new to me, thought this was worth sharing. Launch QuickTime Player (it’s in your Applications folder). Now select New Screen Recording from the File menu, or type control-command-N.
A small screen recording window will appear, like so: Click the little triangle on the right side of the window to adjust microphone and mouse click options. When ready, click the record button in the center of the window. Click and drag a section of the screen to record part of the screen or just click to record the entire screen.
Once you do that, click to start recording. Click the stop button that appears in the menu bar to stop recording. Pretty easy, and the end result is a QuickTime movie you can use anywhere you’d expect (iMovie, YouTube, etc.) Clearly not a method a pro would use, but if your needs are relatively simple, this is a great solution. No, he was being a dick. I’m not the only one who interpreted his response in this way. Several others commented feeling the same. “It was on the front page of the Quicktime X release, which was on the front page of the Snow Leopard release.” This is being blunt.
Right to the point, and giving information. Being “blunt” means being “straightforward” which he did with his first sentence. “I fail to see how it was slipped in.
They aren’t automagically being sneaky just because you didn’t notice.” This is editorializing. This wasn’t a necessary phrase.
The original comment didn’t even say that Apple was being sneaky, just that Apple should make it more obvious. It’s always so lush to explain something to a new Mac user that I’m tutoring, then when he or she feels like it’s too much, you just re-explain it by recording it into a video. They’ll watch the video later on and remember how to do it. And they appreciate how easy it was to just launch QuickTime Player, select the microphone, record the screen and it’s saved to the Desktop.
It’s cute stuff and more people should know about it. Now, if only they added “Default audio recording” without having to have Soundflower installed. I feel your pain. I’ve had my MacBook for three years now and still don’t love it. To find the applications folder, hover over your bar that has internet browsers, iPages, iPhoto, etc. Go to the blue folder with a big A on it.
Click on it and scroll down until you see the QuickTime logo which I believe is a bright blue Q. Click on that to open it so it appears in the above mentioned navigation bar. Once it’s open and active, go to FILE at the top of the page and choose SCREEN RECORDING (or whatever else you want it to do.) Good luck!