![]() ![]() One other minor change on the video editing – this is, like I said, just something that’s nice, is the way they have changed how the resizing works. There’s a couple of options, just some nice things – not really new features, just easier to access them. ![]() You could have just – with video, just pull this all the way down in terms of the opacity. There’s the ability to turn audio of each track on and off – that’s kind of nice. Very quickly, there’s some new controls down here in the lower right hand corner with snapping and whether or not you want the thumbnails to display on the timeline. Really quickly, I’m going to show you a couple of things there. There’s not a lot in the edit part of ScreenFlow 6 that I thought was just really killer. Now the last thing that I like – those are all in the screen capture part of this. But it’s a good step in the right direction. There’s no way to lock this as you grow the screen bigger. You can set a very specific size it’s not something that you can do proportionally, like you can’t just take this and say I need to be still at the 16:9 ratio. The one thing I don’t like here is that it’s not able to do it proportionally even though it’s got these pixel sizes here. This is also a nice feature – if you hold your cursor over a window and hit the space bar, it’ll just record and capture that particular window. There are some presets here so you can say, well I want to record 1920 x 1080 – you can move it around. You’ll see here – you can move this around. If you head down here on the capture screen, you can choose part of your screen to capture. That’s kind of a nice feature that’s going to be helpful, not something just killer-amazing, but definitely a nice feature if you’re looking for it. If you record from your iPhone or iPad, you now get sound. The next thing I like is the iOS recording. The audio has really improved I’m not sure how helpful that’s going to be to everyone, but that is definitely something helpful for me. That’s definitely a nice feature, and you can do a lot of microphones and audio. It’s at a 39% volume, so the majority of the volume is coming from the microphone that I like the sound of better. The Lavalier sounded better than the shotgun so what I can do here is turn down this specific channel. You can see I’ve got channel 1 and channel 2, and the best thing to look at is right here – you’ll see the Lavalier kind of had higher pitches and the shotgun had a lot of the lower pitches. I’m going to extract all the channels and just get rid of the first one there. So if I hold down control and click here, I can go to Extract Audio. And now ScreenFlow will allow you to break that file apart and control each individual channel. When I’m in my studio I record from a Lavalier microphone and a shotgun microphone and it comes out as one file. This is important if you’re recording on a device that records both left and right or different microphones. You can check all the buttons here and then you push record, and it’s going to tell you what it’s going to record, so the desktop, the built-in microphone, the computer audio, and you can confirm what you’re doing so you don’t make a mistake and then get something wrong and have to wait until you’ve recorded everything to realize that it was wrong. So the first thing I like about ScreenFlow version 6 is how it tells you what it’s about to record. For me, none of the new features are earth-shattering or must-have upgrades. As to whether or not to upgrade from version 5, I hope this video helps you make that decision. ![]() And if you are looking to edit on a Mac and you don’t want to become a professional editor, then I encourage you to buy ScreenFlow. ScreenFlow 6 was just released! What’s new? Should you upgrade? Should you buy it in the first place? I’m Brighton West and today I’m going to go over some of the new features of ScreenFlow 6. ![]()
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