Wednesday, 3 April 2013

Screen Video Recorder


Screen Video Recorder is an application that helps you to record screen activity in just a few clicks and save it afterwards in other video formats. This tool has been designed by WORDADDIN STUDIO.

Key Features

Screen captures: the application can capture a full screen or only a limited area of the screen computer. Currently, there are five types of captures: fixed region, full screen, window, fixed size and random region capture. With Screen Video Recorder, you can also record audio and mouse cursor. Recordings are stored in AVI and WMV file formats.
Customization: users are allowed to define output formats, to pause and resume recordings, to configure the recordings so that it can run and save automatically captures. Customizing hotkeys to start and stop more rapidly recordings is also possible.
Hidden mode: if you want nobody to discover that you are taking screenshots from the system, you have to know that hiding the recording is possible. You can also minimize the icon in the system tray so that nobody can suspect your.
Enhancement: for this latest version, some bugs and problems on the cursor capture have been fixed and “Copy File Name to Clipboard” and “Copy Folder Name to Clipboard have been added.

System requirements

Operating System: Windows 2000, Windows XP
Direct X 9

Pros

Screen Video Recorder is practical to create tutorials.
It is packed with a comprehensive help manual.
The application offers a multi-lingual interface.

Cons

This shareware version expires after some days of use.

Source: http://en.kioskea.net/download/download-5319-screen-video-recorder

CamStudio


What is it?

CamStudio is able to record all screen and audio activity on your computer and create industry-standard AVI video files and using its built-in SWF Producer can turn those AVIs into lean, mean, bandwidth-friendly Streaming Flash videos (SWFs)

Here are just a few ways you can use this software:

You can use it to create demonstration videos for any software program
Or how about creating a set of videos answering your most frequently asked questions?
You can create video tutorials for school or college class
You can use it to record a recurring problem with your computer so you can show technical support people
You can use it to create video-based information products you can sell
You can even use it to record new tricks and techniques you discover on your favourite software program, before you forget them

Don't like the sound of your voice? No problem.

CamStudio can also add high-quality, anti-aliased (no jagged edges) screen captions to your recordings in seconds and with the unique Video Annotation feature you can even personalise your videos by including a webcam movie of yourself "picture-in-picture" over your desktop.

And if all that wasn't enough, CamStudio also comes with its own Lossless Codec that produces crystal clear results with a much smaller filesize compared with other more popular codecs, like Microsoft Video 1.

You have total control over the output of your video: you can choose to use custom cursors, to record the whole screen or just a section of it and can reduce or increase the quality of the recording depending on if you want smaller videos (for emailing to people, for instance) or you can have "best quality" ones for burning onto CD/DVD.

But all of these features would be worthless if CamStudio wasn't easy to use ... fortunately that's not the case. CamStudio can be learned in a matter of minutes and comes with a comprehensive built-in helpfile, so if you do manage to get stuck, you can simply hit "Help" and get the answers you need.

So where can I get it and how much does it cost?

You can download and use it completely free - yep - completely 100% free for your personal and commercial projects as CamStudio and the Codec are released under the GPL (for more details on this license, click here.)

There are no royalties or any monies to pay - although if you do use it for a commercial product, I wouldn't say no to a copy of whatever you produce

CamStudio's History

CamStudio was originally released by a company called RenderSoft who were subsequently bought by a company called eHelp who used some of the technology in their program, RoboDemo ...

Some time later, eHelp was bought by Macromedia who wanted RoboDemo (which was to become Captivate) ...

Knowing that CamStudio did some of the stuff RoboDemo did for free (mainly export to streaming Flash), they released a newer version which fixed some bugs but most importantly, removed certain features. Gone was the ability to create SWFs, added was the requirement to register to use it, and over time, links to the various webpages that had CamStudio and its source code, became broken.

However, I managed to find an earlier version complete with the related CamStudio video codec (comparable to Techsmith's excellent TSCC), the source code for both and just put the website up so people could download them ...
CamStudio ... what you liked, what you thought sucked and what you think is missing.

Source: http://camstudio.org/