ScreenFlow is the best application to capture screens and create video screencasts on Mac OS X. There is NOT a Windows version of ScreenFlow and no any scheduled plan to developed ScreenFlow for PC is released. Descriptions for ScreenFlow 7.3. Name: ScreenFlow 7 Version: 7.3 Release Date: March 20, 2018 Developer: Telestream LLC Mac Platform: Intel OS Version: OS X 10.11.0 or later.
In early 2008, I reviewed ( ), one of the first “screen movie studio” applications for the Mac. At the time, I found the program a solid first effort with some room for improvement. The recent release of Telestream’s addresses many of my earlier complaints, and offers some additional features that users who record screen movies will find useful. I tested ScreenFlow 2 on a variety of machines, including a 2.66GHz quad core Mac Pro running OS 10.5.8, a 2.6GHz MacBook Pro running 10.6.1, and even on my OS X-enabled Dell mini (running 10.5.8). On all three of these machines, performance was excellent. I was able to capture audio and video in each application I tested, including RealPlayer, which caused problems for ( ). Users familiar with ScreenFlow 1.x will immediately feel comfortable in ScreenFlow 2.0—there are no dramatic interface changes.
Instead, there are subtle differences in familiar tools, as well as some entirely new features. Of these new features, the ability to add transitions to your screen recordings is one of the most welcomed.
In the previous version of ScreenFlow, you couldn’t (for instance) fade out one piece of a video while fading in the next, or show any sort of transition between the two clips other than a black screen. In ScreenFlow 2, you can choose from 16 different 2D and 3D transitions, each of which can be applied as a starting or ending transition to a given clip or text box. In addition, if you align two clips such that they overlap on the timeline, a transition will automatically be inserted—ScreenFlow’s preferences are used to set the default transition, and the amount of overlap you create when dragging determines how long the transition will take. The 16 2D and 3D transitions in ScreenFlow 2. Adding transitions manually is a simple two-step process. First, Control-click on a clip and use the contextual menu to add a starting or ending transition. Second, Control-click on the newly-inserted transition and change the type using the contextual menu, or open the Transition Inspector to see all the transitions in a pop-up window, complete with examples of how each behaves. To set the duration of each transition, you drag the small vertical bar that divides the transition area from the rest of the clip (as seen in the text clip at the bottom of the image at right); there’s no way to set precise timing by entering a duration in a box, for example.
The transitions are generally well done, and go a long way to making ScreenFlow 2 an all-in-one solution—titles and clips can appear and disappear using transitions of your choice, and the automatic transition insertion when you overlap two clips is a nice timesaver. Mac homebrew update. More powerful video tools ScreenFlow 2 has a new acceleration curve feature that lets you control how actions that affect scaling, rotation, position, and volume are implemented. By default, ScreenFlow 2 uses an acceleration curve that’s linear (not a curve at all)—that is, effects are applied equally over the timeframe during which they’re active.
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