

- CAMTASIA FOR MAC REVIEW 2016 HOW TO
- CAMTASIA FOR MAC REVIEW 2016 64 BIT
- CAMTASIA FOR MAC REVIEW 2016 32 BIT
- CAMTASIA FOR MAC REVIEW 2016 SKIN
CAMTASIA FOR MAC REVIEW 2016 SKIN
Not sure, but the skin and look and feel certainly do appear quite new. Still, keep in mind this seems to really be a dot-zero release of completely rewritten software, not merely a recompile. Camtasia isn't perfect, but it's way easier and more stable than anything I had tried before it. Oh what a disaster all video software was those days. Yes, I recall the dark days of PC editing in the early 2000s, where you had the Sony LANC protocol for PC-to-camcorder control, and Hi8 camcorders for realtime playback/data transfer over FireWire.
CAMTASIA FOR MAC REVIEW 2016 64 BIT
I have my fingers crossed that the stability of this new 64 bit code base will be improved, but 20 years of experience with PCs tells me that is unlikely. Hopefully I'll find some unsability enhancements along the way as well. Automatic safe and automatic crash recovery usually works.Īlso looking forward to using better, more professional looking annotations/captions, new cursor effects, and finally, 4K support. Yep, just as you near the end of a giant editing job, and not really in the mood to lose any changes made since your last save.
CAMTASIA FOR MAC REVIEW 2016 32 BIT
Glad to see 400% is isn't the fasted speed-up anymore! When working with such a large project that takes hours to edit, and hours more to render, that's exactly when the legacy 32 bit Camtasia Studio 8 for Windows traditionally began to falter and sometimes crash.
CAMTASIA FOR MAC REVIEW 2016 HOW TO
My how to video for it will likely consist of about 3 hours of footage that I edit down to about an hour, performing 100 to 200 careful scene cuts or speed ups. This release of Camtasia 9 couldn't have arrived at a better time, with the arrival of VMware vSphere 6.5 expected soon. I'll actually be doing a simple unboxing video of a new 10GbE switch this weekend, editing and publishing the 4K video as a test. My recent move to the speedy new iPhone 7 Plus means I can now get 4K MOVs, 3840x2160 at 30fps.

The source footage is mostly screen recordings of my 1920x1080 (1080p) Windows desktop, but occasionally the imported media is an MOV file from an iPhone, at 1920x1080 30fps, or from an iPhone 6 Plus, at 60fps. Pretty basic cuts and fades are all I really need. I was getting seriously worried there for a bit, since I've invested well over 5 years creating hundreds of popular technical YouTube videos with Camtasia. Heck, my Windows workstations have been 64 bit since the Vista days, a decade ago. The wait has actually been well over 5 years, and I sure hope it was worth it. Here's how Camtasia 9 looks on my 2560x1440 monitor, ideal for previewing 1920x1080 content, unscaled. As a result, Camtasia Studio and Camtasia for Mac are now known as Camtasia. Regardless of the platform you choose, you will now enjoy a fresh, modern look that puts everything right at your fingertips with a unified user interface and workflow across both Mac. With this release we brought the best of Camtasia Studio and Camtasia for Mac together and added new ways to help you create amazing, engaging content.

I do hope TechSmith goes forward with plans to develop a truly 64 bit version of Studioįinally, it's here, Camtasia video editing, in 64 bits! Posted by Paul Braren on (updated on Jul 4 2017) in
