Location: Welcome to ANTS!

Discussion: Camtasia helpReported This is a featured thread

Showing 1 - 15 of 15  |  Show  posts at a time
Richard.Baer
Richard.Baer
Camtasia help
Mar 12 2008, 12:57 PM EDT | Post edited: Mar 12 2008, 12:57 PM EDT
I have been using Camtasia Studio 5 (and upgrade) since last May. I've learned to use callouts, quizzes, click to continue and producing to .swf, avi and flv. I've also gotten an account at toofast.ca that allows me to embed a link to a feedback survey.
Anyone who is starting with Camtasia, feel free to contact me via this wiki.
Richard
4  out of 5 found this valuable. Do you?    
onewoodenleg2
onewoodenleg2
1. Camtasia Sound
Mar 18 2008, 12:22 PM EDT | Post edited: Mar 18 2008, 12:22 PM EDT
Hi Richard! I recently started using Camtasia and I'm pretty good with most of the features. However, I'm not happy with the audio quality. Any tips? What kind of microphone do you use? And, have you tried the blanket over the head technique suggested in the Camtasia product documentation?!? That technique sounds a little odd! :) Do you find this valuable?    
Richard.Baer
Richard.Baer
2. RE: Camtasia Sound
Mar 18 2008, 2:15 PM EDT | Post edited: Mar 18 2008, 2:15 PM EDT
"Hi Richard! I recently started using Camtasia and I'm pretty good with most of the features. However, I'm not happy with the audio quality. Any tips? What kind of microphone do you use? And, have you tried the blanket over the head technique suggested in the Camtasia product documentation?!? That technique sounds a little odd! :)"
I've never heard of the Blanket over the head, I think my breathing might be a bit constricted, panic is not good for audio!
I have a Plantronics headset, USB connection, I think it might be a little better than the separate pins.
Positioning the mic is tricky. Too low and you can hear the plosives, too high and the sound is bottom of a barrel. I find if I put it level with my nose, and keep my head level, that makes for the best sound. That and the F9 key, it took a while to learn to use it before I started babbling!
2  out of 2 found this valuable. Do you?    
onewoodenleg2
onewoodenleg2
3. RE: Camtasia Sound
Mar 19 2008, 10:10 AM EDT | Post edited: Mar 19 2008, 10:10 AM EDT
Thanks - I'll try your suggestions. 2  out of 2 found this valuable. Do you?    
RebeccaBlakiston
RebeccaBlakiston
4. RE: Camtasia vs. Captivate
Mar 21 2008, 6:26 PM EDT | Post edited: Mar 21 2008, 6:26 PM EDT
I'd love to hear what people have to say about which of these products is better for the purposes of creating library tutorials. I'm much more familiar with Camtasia but I have seen some great products come from using Captivate. Do you find this valuable?    
Kazakoff
Kazakoff
5. RE: Camtasia vs. Captivate
Mar 26 2008, 2:38 PM EDT | Post edited: Mar 26 2008, 2:38 PM EDT
"I'd love to hear what people have to say about which of these products is better for the purposes of creating library tutorials. I'm much more familiar with Camtasia but I have seen some great products come from using Captivate."
Rebecca:

I don't use either Camtasia or Captivate, so I cannot say a lot about them except this: I have noticed that some of the files created with Camtasia tend to be larger ones. Captivate and Viewletbuilder on the other hand tend to be about half the size.

I don't know if this is because Viewletbuilder acts much like Powerpoint (in fact its SWF files - that include audio - are not much larger than a typical Powerpoint presentation), whereas Camtasia seems to act more like a movie file (Richard Baer can tell you more about this than I can as he uses Camtasia.)

I also know that because of the way Viewletbuilder operates (i.e. not like a movie), it enables you to add audio and text and associate them with individual slides so you can do a lot of re-recording if you do not like the first recording. This means that you can get pretty finicky about things (and have a project where the audio and text match exactly), whereas with Camtasia, it seems to summarize what you said. Richard did some work on this by using its Pause Feature so there are regular pauses (am I right Richard?) so it would stop and summarize things in close sequence to the actual screen displays.

One thing I will say that I do like about Camtasia is its zoom in and out feature. I don't know if it is in the newest Viewetbuilder or Captivate however. But it is useful. As for Captivate I noticed it has a useful Table of Contents feature that is also useful if people want to select what to view.

I do hope some of this helps. Others with experience using either should also comment.

Cheers,

Carmen Kazakoff-Lane
1  out of 1 found this valuable. Do you?    
Richard.Baer
Richard.Baer
6. RE: Camtasia vs. Captivate
Mar 27 2008, 1:58 PM EDT | Post edited: Mar 27 2008, 1:58 PM EDT
"

I don't use either Camtasia or Captivate, so I cannot say a lot about them except this: I have noticed that some of the files created with Camtasia tend to be larger ones. Captivate and Viewletbuilder on the other hand tend to be about half the size.

I don't know if this is because Viewletbuilder acts much like Powerpoint (in fact its SWF files - that include audio - are not much larger than a typical Powerpoint presentation), whereas Camtasia seems to act more like a movie file (Richard Baer can tell you more about this than I can as he uses Camtasia.)

I also know that because of the way Viewletbuilder operates (i.e. not like a movie), it enables you to add audio and text and associate them with individual slides so you can do a lot of re-recording if you do not like the first recording. This means that you can get pretty finicky about things (and have a project where the audio and text match exactly), whereas with Camtasia, it seems to summarize what you said. Richard did some work on this by using its Pause Feature so there are regular pauses (am I right Richard?) so it would stop and summarize things in close sequence to the actual screen displays.

One thing I will say that I do like about Camtasia is its zoom in and out feature. I don't know if it is in the newest Viewetbuilder or Captivate however. But it is useful. As for Captivate I noticed it has a useful Table of Contents feature that is also useful if people want to select what to view.

I do hope some of this helps. Others with experience using either should also comment.

Cheers,

Carmen Kazakoff-Lane"
Carmen writes:
hereas Camtasia seems to act more like a movie file (Richard Baer can tell you more about this than I can as he uses Camtasia.)

Yes, Camtasia captures continuous screen activity in an .avi file. The F9 key is a pause, which is good to allow a slow server to respond, to type in words, then have them magically pop into the boxes etc.
Once you are done your recording, the editing is like movie editing. You can re-record sound over the top of existing sound track but this is tricky.
A great feature is the Split button. You can split or break into the avi and insert a marker which can be an image, another avi, almost anything.
If you have markers with names, then you can produce the project into a .swf with a table of contents that floats, is on the right, the left etc.
If you go to library.disted.camosun.bc.ca and click on the EBOOKs tutorial, you will see a Table of Contents with images marking the "chapters". This one also has a survey at the end which links to my account at toofast.ca.

I still have not figured out all the tools in it, much less the best way to use the ones I already know! For example, the zoom feature is great when you want to show a small button on a page, but I need more practice on zooming out. Should I zoom back to full screen or stay part zoomed. Many questions, few definitive answers.
Richard
1  out of 1 found this valuable. Do you?    
paulbetty
paulbetty
7. RE: Camtasia vs. Captivate
Mar 28 2008, 11:53 AM EDT | Post edited: Mar 28 2008, 11:53 AM EDT
Amongst the big three (Camtasia, Captivate, and Viewlet Builder) I've noticed the following differences:

Captivate seems to offer the best options in terms of accessibility issues. Slide notes that are rendered by adaptive software, and closed captioning of audio are features I am not sure you'll find in the other products.

Viewlet Builder is the best option if you plan to do add any additional javascript actions or functions. For example, if you want to track your tutorials using Google Analytics, you'll need to add some javascript code to your project. Viewlet builder is the most felexible when it comes to this, you can have events (button click, slide load, etc.) execute multiple actions. So a button can be used to run a javascript function and still direct the user to the next slide, or slide 5, and so on.

Camtasia seems to offer the best options in terms of publishing your project. Having the option of producing a .swf file or an .avi file is very handy if you are looking to host your tutorials on Youtube. However, as mentioned earlier in the thread, since Camtasia records your project as an .avi file, your project files are larger in size.

Paul B.
5  out of 5 found this valuable. Do you?    
pwolfart
pwolfart
8. RE: Camtasia help
Feb 26 2009, 3:44 PM EST | Post edited: Feb 26 2009, 3:44 PM EST
A few of my colleagues have Camtasia, I haven't made the leap yet, but I'm intrigued by the quizzes. Is there a way to make interactive swf files? I.e. let the student drive, but guide them.

Philip
Do you find this valuable?    
paulbetty
paulbetty
9. RE: Camtasia help
Feb 26 2009, 4:09 PM EST | Post edited: Feb 26 2009, 4:09 PM EST
Hi Philip,

I'll let Richard chime in on the specific features of Camtasia, since he works with that product. I'm doing work in Captivate, but as an example, you might want to look at the following tutorial I created for Business Source Premier:

http://insite.regis.edu/library/public/BSP/BusinessSourcePremier_demo.htm

About 45 seconds in, you land on a menu, in which the user then selects what types of documents they are interested in finding. Branching is possible in just about all screencast software, but there are some pros and cons. The resulting file is pretty big. There are some good reasons instead to break up your project into smaller separate screencasts: less bandwidth, smaller files size, etc. Also, if I try to convert this tutorial to digital video: avi, mp4, flv, etc, then my menu is useless, and the content is displayed in one long linear file.

But if you plan on using the quiz or tutorial only as an interactive .swf file, then you have some real options in terms of user driven navigation and making interactive learning objects.

Hope this helps!

Paul B.
1  out of 1 found this valuable. Do you?    
pwolfart
pwolfart
10. RE: Camtasia help
Feb 26 2009, 5:06 PM EST | Post edited: Feb 26 2009, 5:06 PM EST
Thanks, Paul. I'll check this out.

Philip
Do you find this valuable?    
Richard.Baer
Richard.Baer
11. RE: Camtasia help
Feb 26 2009, 5:20 PM EST | Post edited: Feb 26 2009, 5:20 PM EST
"A few of my colleagues have Camtasia, I haven't made the leap yet, but I'm intrigued by the quizzes. Is there a way to make interactive swf files? I.e. let the student drive, but guide them.

Philip"
Yes, I have made quizzes, very simple ones but there is considerable scope if you are using it in a course or with a teacher. Paul's comments on file size and extendability to other formats is very accurate. I ran out of storage on my server account, they would not give me more, so I switched to producing .flv instead of .swf.

If you have the space and the dedicated application then Camtasia will do the job.
Richard
1  out of 1 found this valuable. Do you?    

PaolaCarlesimo
12. RE: Camtasia help
Oct 27 2009, 6:29 AM EDT | Post edited: Oct 27 2009, 6:29 AM EDT
Hi Richard! I have been using Camtasia for a while and I produced some videos. The tool is cool and videos are nice, however I noticed some performance problems. I have published the HTML + SWF as links on a web site. I found out that, often people had problems to launch the videos. especially if they were located far from where the server hosting the videos is located (for example, videos are stored on a server in Rome, I can view them without problems from Rome but people from US cannot launch them because loading takes too long). Do you have any suggestion on this? How can I overcome this problem?

Thanks a lot
paola
Do you find this valuable?    
paulbetty
paulbetty
13. RE: Camtasia help
Oct 27 2009, 4:06 PM EDT | Post edited: Oct 27 2009, 4:06 PM EDT
Ciao Paola!

The speed at which person can download and view the .swf file can depend on a number of factors:

1.) The overall size of the .swf file. There are some nice features in Camtasia, like the ability to zoom in and out, that substantially increase the size of the .swf file. If you are using lots of extra features, then you may think about ways in which you can simplify your presentation, so the resulting .swf file is smaller. Also, if you have a single long playing .swf file, you may consider breaking up the project into a series of smaller .swf files that will load faster. A very basic screencast should produce about 1 minute worth of content for every 1MB in size (i.e. 5MB .swf file = 5 minutes). When you start to add extra animations or zoom the .swf file size goes up!

2.) the issue could be with the server itself, or the amount of bandwidth you have, or the end-users connection. If the end-user is on a dial-up connection, then there is not too much you can do. If many of your users are off-campus, and have slow internet connections, then again you will want to breaking larger projects up into a series of smaller files and/or optimizing for slower internet connections.

3.) You can use a pre-loader that will start playback of the .swf file after a certain percentage of the file has been downloaded. For example, the default pre-loader in Captivate 2 will download the file and begin playback after 60% of the file has been downloaded. In comparison, the default pre-loader in Captivate 3 waits until 100% of the file has been downloaded before playback begins. Even in my new Captivate 3 projects, I still use the preloader from Captivate 2 b/c it helps facilitate a quicker playback. Not sure how Camtasia projects are set-up to load, or if they use a pre-loader, but in Camtasia you may look for some menu or project setting that allows you to select how much of the file needs to be downloaded before playback begins.

1  out of 1 found this valuable. Do you?    
Richard.Baer
Richard.Baer
14. RE: Camtasia help
Oct 28 2009, 8:54 PM EDT | Post edited: Oct 28 2009, 8:54 PM EDT
"Hi Richard! I have been using Camtasia for a while and I produced some videos. The tool is cool and videos are nice, however I noticed some performance problems. I have published the HTML + SWF as links on a web site. I found out that, often people had problems to launch the videos. especially if they were located far from where the server hosting the videos is located (for example, videos are stored on a server in Rome, I can view them without problems from Rome but people from US cannot launch them because loading takes too long). Do you have any suggestion on this? How can I overcome this problem?

Thanks a lot
paola"
Hi Paola,
I had a similar problem, only it was with storage space at my college. Unless you are including interactive quizzes, or HTML links within your tutorial, the .flv format preserves all your editing and is a smaller file size. You can choose to produce in .flv or .mp4 (Camtasia 6.0) for smaller file size.

If you need interactivity, a second option is to store the .swf on the screencast.com site. I have my Jing videos there and the account is free up to about 1GB of storage and bandwidth. That will give fast response time in the US and Canada.
1  out of 1 found this valuable. Do you?    

Related Content

  (what's this?Related ContentThanks to keyword tags, links to related pages and threads are added to the bottom of your pages. Up to 15 links are shown, determined by matching tags and by how recently the content was updated; keeping the most current at the top. Share your feedback on Wetpaint Central.)