![]() ![]() I recommend investigating the best codec for your purpose before making your video! I was blown away! It’s so easy to use, and produces great videos! It has a bunch of video output settings I don’t really know what most of them mean. Recommended softwareĪfter trying those ones out I thought I should look for actual recommendations, and seemed to remember one on Mostly Lisa. This actually seems like a really nifty piece of free software, but I wanted more control over my videos. When you first open it you need to create an account with (to which the videos are exported and uploaded to). I downloaded Jing, but didn’t get to the recording part. It seems fairly similar to Capture Me in terms of features, and otherwise fairly friendly. I downloaded Copernicus as well, but I don’t think I spent much time with it. I would still recommend this software for people wanting to do short videos, but it wasn’t for me. So, 60 seconds was more like 30 seconds because everything took twice as long to load then I wasn’t sure when the video actually stopped recording and started exporting. It turned out that Capture Me was too taxing for my little computer. I thought I could throw together the 60 second videos in iMovie. The sound thing didn’t bother me because I thought it would be easier to do sound and video separately (mainly so I wouldn’t ramble or mutter). Capture Me can only record 60 second chunks and doesn’t record sound. I started with Capture Me because it was something I had bookmarked for when I might want it, and it’s free. So I mentioned several attempts… this included trying several different pieces of software for recording, as well as editing and compressing. It might take a bit more practice to get really good, succinct, interesting tutes, but I was happy with how it turned out. It took several attempts and a week of trying to compress the video to get it right. It was the first time I’d tried something like that. compression is not done in 1 second so u know its lossless.On Monday night (a week and a half ago) I recorded a screencast tutorial (or tutecast as Gio called it). works in LITERALLY 2 seconds or less, maybe 1 second. "flvextract" does the same with flv (flash video) files in case u need it too. If u already found a way let me know if ur way is faster or better for whatever reason. otherwise the default extracts them as raw aac files. but u can set an option 2 extract them 2 mp4 containers which is fine unless u must have m4a for some reason. for sum reason my yamb didnt install mp4box but i just downloaded it from this same page and end of story.ĭont know if u know how 2 put the files in m4a containers cuz i sure dont. Self explanatory except it says if you get the "yamb" u wont need to download "mp4box". what we want is 2 "eject" the cassette tape & take it with us rather than "dubbing" it. technically ur losing quality even if its hard 2 tell the diffrence. ur absolutly right, makes no sense to recompress. in other words just open the mp4 container and take it out. extract audio "as is" no compressing or converting. ![]() i know exactly what ur trying 2 do canubis cuz ive been tryin 2 do it for days. It took me HOURS but i finally found something that does it. ![]()
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