Best Screencasting Tool For Mac
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I have recently made my first screencast for a class and it was a great tool to add to my tool kit. As you mentioned in your blog I think there are so many ways to use a screencast in classroom with both the students and the teachers.
- Mac OS X is full of ways to record your screen, with a tool built-in to Quicktime Player and a vast number of third-party apps. Among the many tools, Screenflow is easily our top choice.
- Snagit is known as a great screencasting tool for quick-response and short videos with a shorter shelf-life. In my previous career, this was the tool I used to share information with my team. In my previous career, this was the tool I used to share information with my team.
Thanks to broadband and some excellent screencasting applications, you don't need to limit yourself to mere static images when you're trying to show someone how to do something on your computer. Record video, audio, and do even more with these screencasting tools.
Photo by ToastyKen.
Screencasting can be an enormously handy tool for all manner of things: demonstrating a product, broadcasting your favorite software hack to all of the internet, emailing a how-to video to your less savvy friends or relatives to help them finally grok that whole email-attachment maneuver. Earlier this week we asked you to share your favorite screencasting tools, and now we're back with the top five for your perusal.
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Best Screencasting Tool?
With the rise of broadband not only do we share pictures of our screens but full out video. This…
Read more ReadScreenFlow (Mac, $99)
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ScreenFlow is a Mac-only screencast editor that fills a nice niche between the limited-but-free options and the car-payment-sized options. ScreenFlow sports advanced features, like the ability to decouple audio and video streams for independent editing and audio ducking (if you're using background music it's automatically adjusted during speaking portions of the video); the ability to freeze, speed up, or slow down the video to allow you to time lapse or zoom through a more tedious portion of the task you're demonstrating. ScreenFlow also supports custom cursors and callouts for emphasizing the cursor or foremost window.
Jing (Windows/Mac, Basic: Free, Pro: $14.95 per year)
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Jing is the more compact cousin of Camtasia Studio (see below) and great for less complicated—and more economical!—screencasting. Both the free and pro version are limited to five minutes of screen recording and come with a free account at Screencast.com for sharing your captures. The free version can save video as SWF video and is branded with the Jing logo. The pro version allows you to save your videos as SWF and MPEG-4 files, the branding is removed, and you can also share directly to YouTube (in HD) and record from your webcam. Both the free and pro version use the same intuitive and easy menu.
CamStudio (Windows, Free)
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CamStudio is a free and open-source offering for the screencasting market. You can record all or part of your screen, customize cursors and text annotations, adjust the quality of the video output, and save screencasts as AVI or SWF files. The interface is easy to understand, and you won't be overwhelmed with extensive options. In a nutshell, it's a free and effective tool for creating screencasts without a lot of bulk or expense.
Camtasia Studio (Windows, $299)
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Camtasia Studio is a powerhouse in the screencasting world. Packed with features, Camtasia Studio makes it easy to create screencasts with presets for a variety of sharing situations like YouTube, HD displays, Screencast.com, and more. You can edit the audio and video independently so you don't have to redo a whole segment just because of an oops in the audio or video portion. Special effects and edits are easy to manipulate thanks to fine control over the time line—you can select a portion of your editing timeline right down to the tenth of a second. It's far from free, but Camtasia Studio is a well thought out and feature rich screencasting tool.
ScreenToaster (Web-based, Free)
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ScreenToaster is the only web-based offering in this week's Hive Five, and it definitely fills a handy niche. Whether you don't screencast enough to want to install a dedicated application or you just need to crank out a quick screencast wherever you are, ScreenToaster can help. You don't get any advanced editing tools—screw up and you're redoing it—but you do get full screen capture, support for picture-in-picture webcam video in the lower right corner, and audio for voice-over. When you're done recording and previewing your clip, you can upload the video to ScreenToaster or YouTube, or download it as a MOV or SWF file. ScreenToaster is free and works with any Java-enabled web browser.
Now that you've had a chance to look over the top five contenders for most popular screencasting tool it's time to cast your vote in the poll below:
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Best Screencasting Tool?(online surveys)
Have a favorite tool that didn't get a shout out? Have a tip or trick of your own for better screencasting? Let's hear about it in the comments.
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Mac OS X is full of ways to record your screen, with a tool built-in to Quicktime Player and a vast number of third-party apps. Among the many tools, Screenflow is easily our top choice. It's fast, feature-rich, handles everything about the screencasting process from start to finish, and doubles as possibly the best simple video editing application on the Mac.
Screenflow
Platform: Mac OS X
Price: $100
Download Page
Features
Free Screencasting Software
- Record from your computer screen, a video camera, microphone and computer's audio all at the same time
- Excellent built-in editor that can also double as a phenomenal video editor.
- The editor allows you to add callouts, shapes, text overlays, and perform simple motion effects very easily.
- Publish directly to YouTube or Vimeo, or export to an all-in-one Flash video presentation
- Mac OS X Lion users can take advantage of several features like resume, auto saving, document versioning, and full screen mode.
- Export screencasts to multiple settings and save your own presets.
- Several built-in audio functions, such as a limiter and easy conversion to mono.
This is just a condensed version of ScreenFlow's features. It is a very powerful, very feature-rich application. You can see the longer list here.
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Where It Excels
Online Screencasting Tools
ScreenFlow is a phenomenal application. It handles the screencasting workflow from start to finish. You can record your screen, yourself, your audio, and your computer's audio all at the same time. Then you can edit what you just recorded in ScreenFlow's built-in editor. From there you can add text overlays, video annotations, motion effects, focus a spotlight on the mouse's position, and a lot more. When you're finished with your recording, you can send it directly to YouTube or Vimeo, export to an embeddable Flash player for your web site, or export the video file to a number of other formats. It just takes care of absolutely everything you could need to do with a screencast.
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But beyond screencasting, it's actually a very functional video editor. In the latest version of ScreenFlow, you can actually create a blank document and just throw a bunch of video files into it for editing purposes. Now that iMovie has its strange interface and isn't terribly easy to use, ScreenFlow is a great alternative for simple editing projects. It has a few built-in motion controls, plenty of transitions, and you can just drag the video you want to edit right onto the timeline. If Quicktime can open the video file, ScreenFlow can edit it. And ScreenFlow won't need to convert it to another format. It'll just play the video as-is. Sometimes it can get a little choppy if the video requires a bit of work to decode, but I use it to edit 1080p H.264 video on a MacBook Air and it handles things just fine.
What makes ScreenFlow so amazing is that it does everything and yet somehow doesn't feel like any of its abilities are superfluous. It's really an incredible app that's worth every cent if you do a lot of screencasting—and especially if you want a great little video editor as an added bonus.
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Where It Falls Short
ScreenFlow is probably the most expensive screencasting application you can buy, coming in at $100. When we started putting together regular screencasts for Lifehacker, we avoided ScreenFlow because of the cost. After trying it out, however, it was clear that it was worth the money. That said, it isn't without its flaws. When Mac OS X Lion was nearing release, ScreenFlow was particularly buggy. When version 3 was released, it also came with several issues as well. Currently the app is very stable, but sometimes updates bring more problems than they fix.
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Additionally, there are just a few quirks in the user interface that become annoying at times. For example, when you drag the clip at the end of the editing timeline to the left, the entire timeline shrinks while you do so making it difficult to drag accurately. There are a handful of issues like that. None are deal breakers, but are definitely annoying when you use the app often.
Although ScreenFlow allows you to set defaults for video transitions and a couple of other things, you can't set defaults for everything you do. For example, you can't set a default font and style for text overlays. But like every other problem with the app, it's not a lack of functionality. ScreenFlow's issues all reside in little quirks and annoyances that you can expect from any app with so many capabilities. You'll find similar problems in any video editing software. While these quirks can get annoying and you might wonder why they left an option or two out, they're all tiny problems.
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The Competition
Quicktime Player—the version included with Mac OS X 10.6 and 10.7—offers screen recording features. They're very limited, but if you need to create a screencast and you don't want to pay for anything you've already got an option built-in. It saves file in H.264 format so your screencasts are immediately ready to upload to video sharing sites or can be shared as-is. The video quality isn't great and you don't have much control over the recording itself, but it's definitely sufficient for casual screencasters.
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Screencasting Windows 10
Screenflick ($29) is a simple but solid option that pays attention to more than just recording the screen. It'll watch for key and mouse presses, too. You can also record computer audio, watermark your recordings, and pause if you need to take a break. It also offers phenomenal export settings, allowing you to choose simple presets or make your own and export to multiple sources in one sweep. It's basically like ScreenFlow without the editor and a better set of video export controls.
Jing (Free or $15/year for Premium) is a screenshot and screencasting tool with a focus on social media. The idea is to simply capture what you see and share it on YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, and others. It is designed to be quick and simple, rather than feature-rich. If those things are important to you, Jing is worth a look.
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iShowU HD ($50-$70) is a simple but powerful screencasting tool. It records its screencasts in an easily-shareable format so you're ready to upload to YouTube or send the screencast via email as soon as you're done. It integrates with pro apps like Final Cut Studio and boasts plenty of optimizations to handle everything it does very quickly. It's definitely a good screencasting app, but we thinking the competition offers either an advantage on price or an advantage on features.
Got another favorite screencasting app we didn't mention? Share it in the comments!
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Itool For Mac
Lifehacker's App Directory is a new and growing directory of recommendations for the best applications and tools in a number of given categories.
Screencasting Programs
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