Screencast
14 TopicsStoryline 3: Deleting Screen Recordings
You can delete screencast slides from a course or delete the source recordings from the project file altogether. Deleting a Screencast You've Already Inserted into Your Course Deleting All Unused Source Recordings from Your Project File Deleting a Specific Source Recording from Your Project File Deleting a Screencast You've Already Inserted into Your Course To delete a screencast you've already added to your course, just select the slide(s) where it appears and press the Delete key on your keyboard. Deleting screencast slides doesn't remove the source recording from your project file. That means you can insert it into your course again later if you change your mind. Deleting All Unused Source Recordings from Your Project File To quickly remove the source recordings for all unused screencasts from your project file, go to the Slides tab on the ribbon, click Insert Recording, and choose Delete Unused Recordings. Articulate Storyline adds “In Use” tags to screencasts to help you identify the ones that are currently being used in the project. Deleting a Specific Source Recording from Your Project File To remove the source recording for a specific screencast from your project file, go to the Slides tab on the ribbon, click Insert Recording, and select the screencast you want to delete. (Source recordings can't be deleted while they're being used in your course. Storyline adds “In Use” tags to screencasts to help you identify the ones that are currently being used.) When the screencast preview window opens, click Delete Recording in the lower right corner, confirm your deletion request (if prompted), then click Cancel to close the window. You Might Also Want to Explore: Recording Screencasts Inserting Screen Recordings Editing Screen Recordings Exporting Screen Recordings16Views0likes0CommentsStoryline 3: Exporting Screen Recordings
Not only can you reuse the same screencast multiple times in the same course, but also you can reuse it in other projects. Just export it. You can export screencasts as MP4 videos, and you can save individual frames as PNG images. (To import step-by-step slides from another project, see this user guide.) We'll look at two export methods here: Using the Screencast Preview Window Using the Fine-Tuning Editor Tip: MP4 videos will be exported with a compression format of H.264/MPEG-4 AVC, an encoding profile of High @L3.0, and a frame rate of 25 fps. Using the Screencast Preview Window To open the screencast preview window, go to the Slides tab on the ribbon, click Insert Recording, and select the screencast you want to export. When the preview window opens, right-click the preview area and choose either of these options: Export Video: This exports a copy of the entire screencast as an MP4 video. Save Frame: This exports an individual frame from the screencast as a PNG image. (Use the video controls to locate the frame you want to export.) Using the Fine-Tuning Editor The action fine-tuning editor lets you change the starting and ending frames for each slide in a step-by-step screencast, and you can also use it to export screencasts. In fact, there are some benefits to using the fine tuning editor over the method described above. You can export a video of the entire screencast or just a portion of it. Also, when you save a frame as an image, you have two sizing options. Tip: The action fine-tuning editor is only available for screencasts that you've inserted as step-by-step slides. Learn more about inserting screencasts. To open the action fine-tuning editor, right-click any slide that's part of a step-by-step screencast and select Action Fine Tuning. Then right-click the preview area and select any of these options: Export Video This exports a copy of the entire screencast as an MP4 video. Export Clip This exports the current clip as an MP4 video. If you need to adjust the clip before exporting it, drag the starting and ending markers along the timeline until you've selected the portion you want. For even greater precision, select Update Start Frame or Update End Frame in the lower left corner, then click the Previous Frame and Next Frame buttons to move the starting/ending point along the timeline one frame at a time. Save Frame at Project Size This exports an individual frame as a PNG image at the size it appears in your course. (Use the video controls to locate the frame you want to export.) Save Frame at Original Size This exports an individual frame as a PNG image at the size it was originally recorded. (Use the video controls to locate the frame you want to export.) You Might Also Want to Explore: Recording Screencasts Inserting Screen Recordings Editing Screen Recordings Deleting Screen Recordings22Views0likes0CommentsStoryline 3: Editing Screen Recordings
After recording a screencast and inserting it into your course, you can edit it. The editing options differ, depending on how you inserted the screen recording. In this user guide, we'll cover: Editing a Video Screencast on a Single Slide Editing a Step-by-Step Screencast Over Multiple Slides Editing a Video Screencast on a Single Slide A video screencast can be edited like any other video in Articulate Storyline. Just right-click it and select Edit Video. When the built-in video editor opens, you can trim and crop to show only the portions you want; adjust the volume, brightness, and contrast to improve quality; and add a logo or watermark for branding. Learn more about the video editor here. Use the Video Tools—Options tab on the ribbon to adjust the video’s properties, including its relative volume, timing, controls, and more. See this user guide for details. Editing a Step-by-Step Screencast Over Multiple Slides Step-by-step slides can be edited like other slides in Storyline. You can duplicate them, add completely new slides, and delete them when necessary. You also have complete control over the contents of each slide. You can modify the captions, hotspots, data-entry fields, mouse movements, and feedback layers that Storyline automatically created for you—or add your own content. You can even change the starting and ending frames for each slide in a step-by-step screen recording. This is particularly useful when you need to cut out a mistake or remove an unnecessary step. Here’s how: Right-click anywhere on the slide you want to modify and select Action Fine Tuning. Drag the starting and ending markers along the timeline until you've selected the clip you want to keep. For even greater precision, select Update Start Frame or Update End Frame in the lower left corner, then click the Previous Frame and Next Frame buttons to move the starting/ending point along the timeline one frame at a time. Use the play/pause button to preview what the slide will look like with your changes. If you want to undo the changes you made, click Reset Original Timing in the lower right corner. To fine tune other slides without closing and reopening the editor, use the drop-down at the top of the window or click Previous Slide/Next Slide. When you're finished, click OK to close the editor. You Might Also Want to Explore: Recording Screencasts Inserting Screen Recordings Exporting Screen Recordings Deleting Screen Recordings39Views0likes0CommentsStoryline 3: Inserting Screen Recordings
After recording a screencast, you're ready to insert it into your Storyline 3 course. In this user guide, we'll look at the following options: Inserting a Screencast as a Video on a Single Slide Inserting a Screencast as View Mode Step-by-Step Slides Inserting a Screencast as Try Mode Step-by-Step Slides Inserting a Screencast as Test Mode Step-by-Step Slides Inserting a Screencast from Another Project You can insert the same screencast into your course multiple times. For example, let's say you recorded a software simulation. You can insert it as a video on a single slide to show learners how to perform a process, then you can insert it again as Try Mode step-by-step slides to give learners an opportunity to practice. Inserting a Screencast as a Video on a Single Slide Use screencast videos to demonstrate a process. They're not interactive, but if you recorded audio with your screencast, it'll be included with the video. (For interactive demonstrations, insert screencasts as View Mode step-by-step slides.) To insert a screencast you just finished recording (where the preview window is still open), select the option to insert it as a Video on a single slide. To insert an existing screencast you previously recorded, go to the Slides tab on the ribbon, click theRecord Screendrop-down arrow,and choose a screencast. Then select the option to insert it as a Video on a single slide. If you want your mouse movements to be shown in the video, mark the box to Show mouse cursor. If not, uncheck it. Decide where the video will be inserted in your course. Use the Insert slides in drop-down to choose New Scene (the default option) or an existing scene name. If you create a new scene, use the Scene name field to give it a name. Click Insert to complete the process. Tip: After inserting a video screencast, you can adjust its properties as you would any other video in Storyline. Inserting a Screencast as View Mode Step-by-Step Slides Use View Mode step-by-step slides to demonstrate a process with mouse movements and captions. If you recorded audio with your screencast, it won't be included with step-by-step slides. However, it'll still be available in the original screen recording in case you want to insert it as a video on a single slide. To insert a screencast you just finished recording (where the preview window is still open), select the option to insert it as Step-by-step slides. To insert an existing screencast you previously recorded, go to the Slides tab on the ribbon, click theRecord Screendrop-down arrow,and choose a screencast. Then select the option to insert it as Step-by-step slides. Choose View mode steps from the corresponding drop-down list. Click View mode options and select the items you want to include on your step-by-step slides. Click OK after making your choices. Language for captions: Choose a language from the drop-down list for the default captions. Add text captions: Mark this box to include default captions. Uncheck it if you'd prefer to add your own captions. Show mouse cursor: Mark this box to include your mouse movements on each slide. Indicate clicks with highlight: Mark this box to add semi-transparent rectangles to click areas to help direct learners' attention. Decide where the video will be inserted in your course. Use the Insert slides in drop-down to choose New Scene (the default option) or an existing scene name. If you create a new scene, use the Scene name field to give it a name. Click Insert to complete the process. Tip: You can add, edit, and delete step-by-step slides, and you can modify the captions, hotspots, data-entry fields, mouse movements, and feedback layers that were automatically generated for you. You can even change the starting and ending frames for each slide with the Action Fine Tuning editor. Inserting a Screencast as Try Mode Step-by-Step Slides Use Try Mode step-by-step slides to give learners the opportunity to practice a series of steps. Try Mode slides function as ungraded assessments. If you recorded audio with your screencast, it won't be included with step-by-step slides. However, it'll still be available in the original screen recording in case you want to insert it as a video on a single slide. To insert a screencast you just finished recording (where the preview window is still open), select the option to insert it as Step-by-step slides. To insert an existing screencast you previously recorded, go to the Slides tab on the ribbon, click theRecord Screendrop-down arrow,and choose a screencast. Then select the option to insert it as Step-by-step slides. Choose Try mode steps from the corresponding drop-down list. Click Try mode options and select the items you want to include on your step-by-step slides. Click OK after making your choices. Language for captions: Choose a language from the drop-down list for the default captions. Show correct feedback: Mark this box to give learners feedback when they respond to steps correctly. Show hand cursor when hovering hotspots: Mark this box to change the mouse to a hand cursor when learners hover over hotspots. Show hint captions: Mark this box to display hint captions. If you show hint captions, use the corresponding drop-down to choose when they show: Always or When hovered. Decide where the video will be inserted in your course. Use the Insert slides in drop-down to choose New Scene (the default option) or an existing scene name. If you create a new scene, use the Scene name field to give it a name. Click Insert to complete the process. Tip: You can add, edit, and delete step-by-step slides, and you can modify the captions, hotspots, data-entry fields, mouse movements, and feedback layers that were automatically generated for you. You can even change the starting and ending frames for each slide with the Action Fine Tuning editor. Inserting a Screencast as Test Mode Step-by-Step Slides Use Test Mode step-by-step slides to test learners' knowledge of a process. Test Mode slides function as graded exams. If you recorded audio with your screencast, it won't be included with step-by-step slides. However, it'll still be available in the original screen recording in case you want to insert it as a video on a single slide. To insert a screencast you just finished recording (where the preview window is still open), select the option to insert it as Step-by-step slides. To insert an existing screencast you previously recorded, go to the Slides tab on the ribbon, click theRecord Screendrop-down arrow,and choose a screencast. Then select the option to insert it as Step-by-step slides. Choose Test mode steps from the corresponding drop-down list. Click Test mode options and select the items you want to include on your step-by-step slides. Click OK after making your choices. Show correct feedback: Mark this box to give learners feedback when they respond to steps correctly. Show incorrect feedback: Mark this box to give learners feedback when they respond to steps incorrectly. Automatically create a result slide: Mark this box to let Storyline automatically generate a result slide for the test. If you plan to create one manually, uncheck this box. Limit attempts to: By default, learners can retry each step an unlimited number of times, but you can change that by selecting a number from the drop-down list. If you let learners retry steps, you can provide "try again" feedback between attempts by marking the box to Show try again feedback. (To customize the default "try again" feedback, see Working with Feedback Layers.) Decide where the video will be inserted in your course. Use the Insert slides in drop-down to choose New Scene (the default option) or an existing scene name. If you create a new scene, use the Scene name field to give it a name. Click Insert to complete the process. Tip: You can add, edit, and delete step-by-step slides, and you can modify the captions, hotspots, data-entry fields, mouse movements, and feedback layers that were automatically generated for you. You can even change the starting and ending frames for each slide with the Action Fine Tuning editor. Inserting a Screencast from Another Project To reuse a screencast from another Storyline project, import at least one of the step-by-step slides from the original project into your new project. This makes the entire screen recording available in the new project, and you can reuse it as often as you like—either as a video on a single slide or as step-by-step slides. If you only need a video of the screencast, export an MP4 video of the screencast from the original project, then import it into the new project. You Might Also Want to Explore: Recording Screencasts Editing Screen Recordings Exporting Screen Recordings Deleting Screen Recordings29Views0likes0CommentsStoryline 3: Recording Screencasts
In this user guide, we'll explore how to record new screencasts in Storyline 3. (To insert a previously-recorded screencast into your course as a video or a series of step-by-step slides, see this user guide.) Launch the Screen Recorder Select Your Recording Options Size and Position the Recording Area Record Your Screen Name and Preview Your Screen Recording Insert the Screen Recording into Your Course Step 1: Launch the Screen Recorder There are several ways to launch the screen recorder. Here are the three quickest ways: On the Storyline start screen, click Record Screen to begin a new project by recording your screen. In an existing project, go to the Slides tab on the ribbon and click Record Screen. In Story View, go to the Home tab on the ribbon, and click the top half of the Record Screen button. The Storyline window will temporarily disappear and the screen recorder will launch (but it won't start recording right away). Step 2: Select Your Recording Options When the screen recorder appears, the first thing you'll want to do is set your recording options. Click the gear icon on the recorder control bar. When the Screen Recording window opens, configure the following settings and click OK. Shortcuts Use these fields to assign keyboard shortcuts for stopping the recording process, pausing/resuming the recording process, and taking screenshots while recording. Just place your cursor in each field and press the desired shortcut key(s). Audio Recording To record audio during your screencast, mark the Microphone box, then use the drop-down list to choose a microphone. To record system sounds, mark the Speakers box, then use the drop-down list to choose a playback device. A note about recorded audio: If you decide to insert your screen recording as step-by-step slides, recorded audio won't be used. Step-by-step slides display only the action-related video clips from your screencast. Your audio will still be available in the original screen recording in case you want to insert it as a video on a single slide. Options If you're recording a software demonstration or a program that has multiple windows, you may want to mark the box to Move new windows into recording area to make new windows visible in the recording area. To display a Storyline icon in your computer system tray while you’re recording, mark the System tray icon box. If you need to record your system tray and would prefer not to see the Storyline icon in your screencast, uncheck this box. Step 3: Size and Position the Recording Area To adjust the size of your recording area, drag the sizing handles on the dashed outline or use the drop-down list on the control bar to choose preset dimensions. To adjust the location of your recording area, just drag it to a different area of your screen. Here are some helpful tips for sizing your recording window: To optimize your screencast so it fills the entire slide, be sure the size of your recording window matches your slide size. The maximum screen recording area is 2046 pixels by 2046 pixels. Multi-monitor recording isn't supported. If you have multiple monitors, we recommend using the same screen resolution for all display devices and setting the display scaling to 100%. See this article for more details. If you're recording a web app, we recommend using Internet Explorer. It sends the richest data to the Windows Accessibility API, so Storyline knows what to record. Firefox also works well. Google Chrome reports little information, so caption details will be missing and some steps could be omitted entirely. Step 4: Record Your Screen You can record up to two hours in a single recording. When you're ready to begin recording: Click the red Record button on the recording control bar. If you need to pause the recording, use the pause/resume keyboard shortcut you specified earlier or click the Pause button on the control bar. To resume, use the keyboard shortcut again or click the Record button on the control bar. If you make a mistake or want to start over, click the trash icon on the control bar to discard your current recording, then click the red Record button to start over. To exit without recording, click Cancel on the control bar. When you're finished, click Done on the control bar. Step 5: Name and Preview Your Screen Recording When the Insert Slides window appears, you'll have the option to change the default name of your screen recording so you can identify it later. Just enter a name in the field at the top of the window. To preview your screencast, click the play/pause button in the lower left corner or use the seekbar to jump to a specific point in the recording. If you change your mind and want to discard the screencast, click Cancel. Step 6: Insert the Screen Recording into Your Course Now you're ready to insert the screen recording into your course. Depending on its purpose, you can insert it as a video on a single slide, as a series of step-by-step slides, or both. To learn how, see this user guide. You Might Also Want to Explore: Inserting Screen Recordings Editing Screen Recordings Exporting Screen Recordings Deleting Screen Recordings69Views0likes0CommentsPeek 360 for Windows: Recording and Distributing Screencasts
Peek 360 is the fastest, easiest way to record screencasts on a Windows PC. Simply record your screen and narration. Your screencast will automatically upload toReview 360when you're done recording, so you can collect feedbackfrom stakeholders or download your video as an MP4 file or LMS package. Follow these steps: Install Launch Prepare Record Distribute Step 1: Install If you haven’t already done so, install the Articulate 360 desktop app on your Windows PC. Open the Articulate 360 desktop app and click the Install button next to Peek 360. Peek 360 will automatically install without any additional prompts. Step 2: Launch Peek 360 always runs quietly in your computer’s system tray (beside the clock). To record a new screencast, just click the Peek 360 icon in the system tray and choose New Recording. If Peek 360 isn’t already running, you can launch it by opening the Articulate 360 desktop app and clicking the Open button next to Peek 360. Tip: You can also right-click the Peek 360 icon in the system tray and choose Preferences to customize your keyboard shortcuts for pausing and ending recordings. Step 3: Prepare First, Peek 360 will ask what you want to record. Choose one of your open programs or your entire screen, then click Select to launch the recorder. If you need to resize the recording area, just drag the sizing handles to select the portion of the screen you want to capture. You can also move the recording window by dragging the four-headed arrow in the middle of the app. Choose a microphone from the recording control bar. Choose None if you don’t need to record audio with your screencast. Step 4: Record Click the red Record button. If you need to pause while you’re recording, click the Pause button, then click the Record button again to resume. If you need to start over, click the Delete button (the garbage bin icon), then click Record to begin again. When you’re finished, click Done. Peek will let you preview your screencast and give it a name. To upload it as new content, click Upload. To create a new version of existing content, click Update an existing recording, select the item you want to update, then click Update. (You’ll also see an option to Upload as a new recording if you change your mind.) Peek 360 automatically: Saves an MP4 video of your screencast on your computer here: %username%\Documents\Peek 360 Uploads your screencast toReview 360where you can collect feedbackfrom stakeholders Copies theReview 360 link for your uploaded screencast to your clipboard so you can immediately send it to reviewers Step 5: Distribute There are several ways to distribute your Peek 360 screen recording. You can: Collect feedback with Review 360 Open your web browser to your Review 360 home page and click your screencast to open it. Click Share in the upper right corner. If you want to password-protect your screencast, mark the box to Set a password and enter a password in the field provided. Copy the shareable link, then send it to your reviewers. Be sure to give them the password, too, if you added one. Note: Although share links are public, we prevent search engines from indexing our site so they won’t be searchable. However, if you post these links on a public web page, they may be indexed by a search engine. To protect confidential information,set a passwordorlimit access to specific users. Download it from Review 360 Peek 360 automatically saves an MP4 video of your screencast on your computer here: %username%\Documents\Peek 360 But if you’re away from your computer or ever need to recover the MP4 video, you can download it from Review 360. Open your web browser to your Review 360 home page and click your screencast to open it. Click the More ellipsis (...) in the upper right corner and choose Download. Select a location on your computer and click Save. Export it to an LMS package Want to track learners progress as they view your screencast? Articulate 360 can help with that. Just export your screencast to an LMS package, then upload it to your LMS. Open your web browser to your Review 360 home page and click your screencast to open it. Click the More ellipsis (...) in the upper right corner and choose Export to LMS. Select an LMS spec: AICC, SCORM 1.2, SCORM 2004, or xAPI (Tin Can API). Enter a completion percentage (defaults to 80%). Click Export. Select a location on your computer and click Save. Upload the zip file to your LMS. Import it into a Rise 360 lesson Go to your Rise 360 home page and open an existing course or start a new one. Edit an existing lesson or create a new one. Use theblocks shortcut bar to add a video block to the lesson. Or, clickthe insert block icon that appears between existing blocks to open the block library, then insert a Multimedia > Video block. Replace the default video with your Peek 360 video file, which you can find here: %username%\Documents\Peek 360 Insert it into a Storyline, Studio, or Replay project Since Peek 360 automatically saves an MP4 video of your screencast on your local hard drive, you can easily import it into a Storyline, Studio, or Replay project. You’ll find your local Peek 360 videos here: %username%\Documents\Peek 360 To learn how to import videos into Storyline, Studio, and Replay, see these user guides: Storyline 360: Adding Videos Presenter 360: Adding a Video from a File Quizmaker 360: Adding Videos Engage 360: Adding Videos Replay 360: Adding Video Files Upload it to a video-hosting site Since Peek 360 generates an MP4 file, you can upload your screencast to video-hosting sites, such as YouTube and Vimeo. Share it via social media Peek 360 screencasts are easy to share via social media sites, such as Facebook and Twitter.181Views0likes0CommentsPeek 360 for Mac: Recording and Distributing Screencasts
Peek 360 is the fastest, easiest way to record screencasts on a Mac. Simply record your screen and narration.Your screencast will automatically upload toReview 360when you're done recording, so you can collect feedbackfrom stakeholders or download your video as an MP4 file or LMS package. Follow these steps: Install Launch Prepare Record Distribute Step 1: Install Open the Mac App Store and search for Peek 360, or click here to jump directly to the Peek app. Click Get, then click Install App. Sign in with your Apple ID and password when prompted, and Peek 360 will automatically install. Step 2: Launch Peek 360 always runs quietly in your menu bar. To record a new screencast, just click the Peek 360 icon on the menu bar and choose New Recording. If Peek 360 isn’t already running, you can launch it by going to Finder > Applications > Peek 360. Step 3: Prepare First, Peek 360 will ask what you want to record. Choose one of your open apps or your entire screen, then click Select to launch the recorder. If you need to resize the recording area, just drag the sizing handles to select the portion of the screen you want to capture. You can also move the recording window by dragging the four-headed arrow in the middle of the app. Choose a microphone from the recording control bar. Choose None if you don’t need to record audio with your screencast. Step 4: Record Click the red Record button. If you need to pause while you’re recording, click the Pause button, then click the Record button again to resume. If you need to start over, click the Delete button (the garbage bin icon), then click Record to begin again. When you’re finished, click Done. Peek 360 lets you preview your screencast and give it a name. To upload it as new content, click Upload. To create a new version of existing content, click Update an existing recording, select the item you want to update, then click Update. (You’ll also see an option to Upload as a new recording if you change your mind.) Peek 360 automatically: Saves an MP4 video of your screencast on your Mac here: /users/<username>/Movies/Peek 360 Uploads your screencast toReview 360 where you can collect feedback from stakeholders Copies the Review 360 link for your uploaded screencast to your clipboard so you can immediately send it to reviewers Step 5: Distribute There are several ways to distribute your Peek 360 screen recording. You can: Collect feedback with Review 360 Open your web browser to your Review 360 home page and click your screencast to open it. Click Share in the upper right corner. If you want to password-protect your screencast, mark the box to Set a password and enter a password in the field provided. Copy the shareable link, then send it to your reviewers. Be sure to give them the password, too, if you added one. Note: Although share links are public, we prevent search engines from indexing our site so they won’t be searchable. However, if you post these links on a public web page, they may be indexed by a search engine. To protect confidential information,set a passwordorlimit access to specific users. Download it from Review 360 Peek 360 automatically saves an MP4 video of your screencast on your Mac here: /users/<username>/Movies/Peek 360 But if you’re away from your computer or ever need to recover the MP4 video, you can download it from Review 360. Open your web browser to your Review 360 home page and click your screencast to open it. Click the More ellipsis (...) in the upper right corner and choose Download. Select a location on your computer and click Save. Export it to an LMS package Want to track learners progress as they view your screencast? No problem. Just export your screencast as an LMS package, then upload it to your LMS. Open your web browser to your Review 360 home page and click your screencast to open it. Click the More ellipsis (...) in the upper right corner and choose Export to LMS. Select an LMS spec: AICC, SCORM 1.2, SCORM 2004, or xAPI (Tin Can API). Enter a completion percentage (defaults to 80%). Click Export. Select a location on your computer and click Save. Upload the zip file to your LMS. Import it into a Rise 360 lesson Go toyour Rise 360 home page and open an existing course or start a new one. Edit an existing lesson or create a new one. Use theblocks shortcut bar to add a video block to the lesson. Or, click the insert block icon that appears between existing blocks to open the block library, then insert a Multimedia > Video block. Replace the default video with your Peek 360 video file, which you can find here: /users/<username>/Movies/Peek 360 Insert it into a Storyline, Studio, or Replay project Since Peek 360 automatically saves an MP4 video of your screencast on your local hard drive, you can easily import it into a Storyline, Studio, or Replay project. You’ll find your local Peek 360 videos here: /users/<username>/Movies/Peek 360 To learn how to import videos into Storyline, Studio, and Replay, see these user guides: Storyline 360: Adding Videos Presenter 360: Adding a Video from a File Quizmaker 360: Adding Videos Engage 360: Adding Videos Replay 360: Adding Video Files Upload it to a video-hosting site Since Peek 360 generates an MP4 file, you can upload your screencast to video-hosting sites, such as YouTube and Vimeo. Share it via social media Peek 360 screencasts are easy to share via social media sites, such as Facebook and Twitter.51Views0likes0CommentsReplay 360: Adding Screen Recordings and Webcam Videos
Replay 360 lets you record screencasts of your computer desktop and webcam videos of yourself—at the same time or separately. Recording a Screencast and a Webcam Video at the Same Time Recording a Screencast Only Recording a Webcam Video Only Recording a Screencast and a Webcam Video at the Same Time When you record a screencast and a webcam video at the same time, Replay places the screencast in track A and the webcam video in track B with a chain linking them together. Here's how to record both at the same time: Click Record Screen on the ribbon. When the recording window appears, select a microphone (or disable audio) in the lower left corner. Choose a predefined size for the recording area or use the sizing handles to frame your recording area. If you'd like to change your recording keyboard shortcuts, click the gear icon, make your changes, and click OK. Move the webcam slider to On. When the Webcam Settings window appears, select a webcam and capture size. When you're ready to record, click the red Record button in the lower left corner. If you need to pause during your recording, click the Pause button in the lower left corner or use the keyboard shortcut you specified in step 4 above (defaults to Alt+D). If you need to start over, click the delete icon, then click the red Record button again. When you're finished, click Done or use the keyboard shortcut you specified in step 4 above (defaults to the Escape key). Recording a Screencast Only To record a screencast only: Click Record Screen on the ribbon. When the recording window appears, select a microphone (or disable audio) in the lower left corner. Choose a predefined size for the recording area or use the sizing handles to frame your recording area. If you'd like to change your recording keyboard shortcuts, click the gear icon, make your changes, and click OK. Move the webcam slider to Off. When you're ready to record, click the red Record button in the lower left corner. If you need to pause during your recording, click the Pause button in the lower left corner or use the keyboard shortcut you specified in step 4 above (defaults to Alt+D). If you need to start over, click the delete icon, then click the red Record button again. When you're finished, click Done or use the keyboard shortcut you specified in step 4 above (defaults to the Escape key). Recording a Webcam Video Only To record a webcam video only: Click Record Screen on the ribbon. When the recording window appears, select a microphone in the lower left corner. Choose No screen recording from the recording size selector. If you'd like to change your recording keyboard shortcuts, click the gear icon, make your changes, and click OK. Move the webcam slider to On. When the Webcam Settings window appears, select a webcam and capture size. When you're ready to record, click the red Record button in the lower left corner. If you need to pause during your recording, click the Pause button in the lower left corner or use the keyboard shortcut you specified in step 4 above (defaults to Alt+D). If you need to start over, click the delete icon, then click the red Record button again. When you're finished, click Done or use the keyboard shortcut you specified in step 4 above (defaults to the Escape key). If you've already recorded a webcam video and screencast at the same time, you can still hide the screencast if you'd like. After adding the screencast and webcam video to your Replay project, move the playhead in the timeline to the point where your screencast begins, and click video mix B. This hides track A (your screencast) and fills the stage with track B (your webcam video). To learn more about mixing videos, see this user guide.85Views0likes0CommentsReplay 360: Creating Your First Screencast Video
In this tutorial, you’ll learn to use the intuitive Replay 360 interface to create screencast videos. You can record your screen activity and your webcam separately or at the same time. Watch this video demonstration, then follow the activities below to practice. Practice Activities: Set Your Recording Options Record Your Screen Understand How Your Canvas Is Sized Practice Activity: Set Your Recording Options First, we’ll need set the stage for our screen recording. Launch an app that you’d like to practice recording, such as PowerPoint or your web browser. Launch Replay 360 and click New Project on the start screen. Click Record Screen on the ribbon. Replay will temporarily hide and a recording window will appear. Choose a microphone from the audio selector if you want to record audio. Move the webcam slider to On if you want to record your screen and your webcam at the same time. Use the size selector or use the sizing handles to adjust your recording area. Practice Activity: Record Your Screen When you’re ready to begin recording, click the red Record button. Interact with the app you want to record (e.g., PowerPoint or your web browser). Click Done when you’re finished. Replay will reappear, and your screen recording will display in track A. If you also recorded your webcam, it’ll appear in track B. To preview your project, move the playhead to the beginning of the timeline and click the play/pause button above the timeline. If you want to work with this project again later, be sure to save it (Ctrl+S) to your local hard drive. Tip: You can add multiple screen recordings to the same project. You can also import video files. Practice Activity: Understand How Your Canvas Is Sized The size of your Replay canvas (or video stage) will automatically adjust to accommodate your screencasts and video files. It'll be as wide as your widest video and as tall as your tallest video. Other videos and images in your project that are smaller than these dimensions will be centered on the stage. Summary In this tutorial, you learned how to record screencast videos in Replay 360. You can also import audio clips and images. See these user guides for details: Adding Audio Clips Adding Images In the next tutorial, we’ll use the timeline to rearrange media clips, mix media between two tracks, and add lower thirds.270Views0likes0CommentsStoryline 360: Deleting Screen Recordings
You can delete screencast slides from a course or delete the source recordings from the project file altogether. Deleting a Screencast You've Already Inserted into Your Course Deleting All Unused Source Recordings from Your Project File Deleting a Specific Source Recording from Your Project File Deleting a Screencast You've Already Inserted into Your Course To delete a screencast you've already added to your course, just select the slide(s) where it appears and press the Delete key on your keyboard. Deleting screencast slides doesn't remove the source recording from your project file. That means you can insert it into your course again later if you change your mind. Deleting All Unused Source Recordings from Your Project File To quickly remove the source recordings for all unused screencasts from your project file, go to the Slides tab on the ribbon, click Insert Recording, and choose Delete Unused Recordings. Articulate Storyline adds “In Use” tags to screencasts to help you identify the ones that are currently being used in the project. Deleting a Specific Source Recording from Your Project File To remove the source recording for a specific screencast from your project file, go to the Slides tab on the ribbon, click Insert Recording, and select the screencast you want to delete. (Source recordings can't be deleted while they're being used in your course. Storyline adds “In Use” tags to screencasts to help you identify the ones that are currently being used.) When the screencast preview window opens, click Delete Recording in the lower right corner, confirm your deletion request (if prompted), then click Cancel to close the window. You Might Also Want to Explore: Recording Screencasts Inserting Screen Recordings Editing Screen Recordings Exporting Screen Recordings47Views0likes0Comments