Telestream’s ScreenFlow, the highly capable screen capture app for Mac, was just updated to version 10. Over the years, ScreenFlow has grown into a powerful video capture, composition, and editing ...
Screencasts—video tutorials that focus on a captured computer screen accompanied by narration—are an increasingly popular instructional medium. They show rather than simply tell, making them a solid ...
Mac OS X screen recording application, ScreenFlow, has been updated fixing several issues with the application. Among the enhancements in ScreenFlow 1.2.1 is improved support for hardware zooming ...
Extensive editing, titling and annotation features recently added to ScreenFlow 7 make it a serious production tool. ScreenFlow 7 will record your screen as it always has, but it now goes dramatically ...
Vara Software's fantastic screencasting application, ScreenFlow, has just been updated to version 1.2. Brett and I have both raved about ScreenFlow in the past, but the more I use the program, the ...
Nevada City, California, June 23, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Telestream ®, a global leader of digital media tools, media streaming and delivery technologies, today announced the immediate availability ...
Since Apple released Snow Leopard last year and QuickTime came with built-in screen recording capabilities, many people started thinking apps such as Screenflow or Camtasia suddenly lost all of their ...
Mac OS X is full of ways to record your screen, with a tool built-in to Quicktime Player and a vast number of third-party apps. Among the many tools, Screenflow is easily our top choice. It's fast, ...
Computer software maker Telestream has launched an updated version of its screencasting and video editing software for the Mac. Version 5.0 of ScreenFlow includes direct recording from iOS devices, ...
Whether you love them or hate them, screencasts made on Macs just got exponentially better. We at TUAW are in awe of the latest contender for your screencasting love: ScreenFlow, from Vara Software ...
There used to be an advertisement – I forget what it was for, exactly – that portrayed the user sitting in an armchair facing his computer, with his hair, his dog, and everything else in the room ...