![]() ![]() Screenium's comfortable and powerful video editor provides you with all the tools you need to cut your footage, embed texts or add effects, transitions, or animations. Accentuate mouse clicks, add geometric shapes or hide screen sections that contain personal information. Of course you can also edit audio tracks and add filters. Export files, share via e-mail, Messages app or direct upload to video portals such as Youtube and Vimeo VoiceOver using your own voice or auto-generated voice tracks Versatile video effects and transitions Highly optimized for multi-processor Macs Incognito mode to hide desktop, desktop symbols, or simply Screenium Optionally embed FaceTime camera footage as a Picture-in-Picture clip #SCREENIUM FOR WINDOWS FULL#Ĥ recording modes: Full screen, area selection, specific window, iOS / tvOS device Using text synthesis, you can even add multilingual audio comments or auto-generated voice tracks. Have licesenses to almost everything that records a screen. Grew up using Camtasia on Windows, over a decade at this point. Camtasia 2020 is a decent recorder, outstanding editor on both platforms (but weaker on the Mac). But, in terms of codecs, quality of compression, and output, I would rate it the weakest of these three, on the Mac. If I am animating or annotating, this remains my fave of the 3. Screenflow 9.0.3 is a solid little product, much more tightly coded from a native OS X perspective. It captures and outputs very well, but have never quite liked it much as an editor. I usually just output and dump in to DaVinci resolve Studio. It's only $100 or so per year, but this is likely my last year updating. Screenium 3 has made huge leaps since I purchased 3 years ago. Intuitive little interface, tightly integrated with the OS. I use Screenium for one thing, capture and output. I do not edit in it, although you could if it was all you had. I do not animate, annotate or do anything but capture. But, WOW, it absolutely rocks in terms of quality and control. The best of breed, for screen capture and screen output on the Mac, IMHO. Fast, and the developer really keeps up with new OS and OS X beta releases. Well, worth the money, IF, you edit in other programs. I've used ScreenFlow for years, and it is certainly top-shelf and a potent tool for professionals. The upgrade cost has given me pause, though, not because it's not worth it it is. But rather because I don't use it on a daily or weekly basis to justify that cost. Then I found this one more or less by accident. Read the reviews and laughed at those one-star ratings. Step 1: Pay attention to what you're doing, read all the information that pops-up during first-run. ![]() (ALL screen-capture software require an additional sound driver installed to record system sounds, *including ScreenFlow*.)Īs for the "speed" of processing? Entirely similar to ScreenFlow and even FINAL CUT X.Īnd what about those seriously misleading gripes, like the one complaining about having to press the Enter key to start recording? Ummmm. It's a 10-second, and you only press the Enter key to skip that and begin recording immediately. ![]() Some people tell a story in such a way as to intentionally make someone (in this case: this software_ look bad. Here's the real story on this app: OUT-FARKING-STANDING. It also has way more features than the (old) version of ScreenFlow I currently have (Though the current version surely is now up-to-par with this). ![]()
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