![]() ![]() To be fair, most of the issues we had encountered in the past, had been ironed out by the time 10 arrived on the scene, but it’s always great to see a long list of bugs being squashed that had previously plagued editors. There are of course numerous other minor changes, mostly under the hood, to improve its reliability and robustness. These are some of the tentpole features of ScreenFlow 10, all of which will greatly improve your capturing and editing abilities, and solidify this app’s position as a premiere tool. As long as you know you won’t need any footage that’s outside of the portions used, this is a great way to save a project, and your hard drive space. Even better, unused sections of longer clips will be excised so that only what is in the timeline is preserved. When you choose to Archive a project, ScreenFlow will automatically see which clips have not been used and will remove them from the file. This potential headache is now a thing of the past with the new archiving feature. The new destructive archival tool can save you a heck of a lot of disk space (Image credit: telestream) This would not only be time consuming, but also easy to get wrong, especially if your project was a complex one. Until now, you might have to manually delete any unused clip which would unnecessarily bloat your file size and needlessly take up storage space. When you’re done with a project, chances are you might wish to save the construct should you need to revisit it at a later date, and perhaps draw footage from it for a new video. You can also edit the nested clips individually should you need to, giving you a welcome and much needed enhanced flexibility when working on a complex project. This makes it easier to more them around, or even apply the same effects to the lot. Basically, it allows you to put multiple clips into one. Nesting isn’t a new concept and has been available on numerous other video editors for a good long while, but it’s good to see its inclusion in ScreenFlow. Nesting finally arrives on ScreenFlow, allowing you to simplify a complex edit (Image credit: telestream) Until now, if you were to record your computer’s audio, and somehow, an email notification which you’d forgot to mute chimed, overlapping the audio you were trying to capture, you’d either be stuck with it, or have to redo your capture. One very interesting development centres around audio capture. Sadly you have no way of refining this, so your mileage may vary - although the simplest backgrounds unsurprisingly lead to the best results. If you don’t have a green screen, you can use this to cut out or blur out anything that’s behind you. One new built-in filter we liked is the Automatic Background Removal. We particularly liked the option of importing your own Cube Look Up Tables to use your own custom effects - if you have them. You choice of effects has been parred down, with each being represented by a large thumbnail preview of the actual selected clip - which means you can see immediately how an effect will affect the look of your footage. ![]() Text-based also meant no previews, leading to a poorly used feature. Sure, you had a search field, but if you weren’t sure what an effect was called, it wasn’t much use. Prior to Version 10, the available effects were presented in a long text-based list. Fixed a bug that occurs on Mac OS X 10.The reworked filters and effects panel makes it much easier to see how they will affect a selected clip (Image credit: telestream)Īnother improvement can be found in the Effects section.Fixed an issue that occurs on Mac OS X 10.7 Lion that prevented capturing from a secondary display.Fixed an issue that occurs on Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, on machines that use the Intel GMA950 chip, which caused all exports to look discolored.Fixed a bug that occurs on OS X 10.7 Lion that caused there to be no audio when exporting files using Vimeo or Flash publish.Use ScreenFlow to create high-quality software demos, tutorials, app previews, training, presentations and more. The finished result is a QuickTime or Windows Media movie, ready for publishing to your Web site or blog or directly to Vimeo. The easy-to-use editing interface lets you creatively edit your video, and add additional images, text, music and transitions for a truly professional-looking video. With ScreenFlow you can record the contents of your entire monitor while also capturing your video camera, microphone and your computer audio. ScreenFlow is powerful, easy-to-use screencasting software for the Mac. ![]()
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