AppleInsider - Frontpage News - Saturday, August 24, 2019 at 11:11 AM
How to take screen recordings on Mac, iOS and Apple TV
  
Tips
Apple has provided ways to record videos of your Mac, iOS, and Apple TV
screens, but it doesn't make it easy to figure out how to do it. Here's how
to get it done.

Someone's clearly forgotten the phrase 'be kind, rewind'.
Sometimes an image is not quite enough. If you want to show someone how to
do something on their device -or you want to document a whole process -then
you need more than a screengrab or screen shot. You need video. Apple has
you covered for how to do this, and so do other companies.
Without any third-party tools, you can record a video showing the screen on
your Mac, your iOS device or even your Apple TV. Then with certain
third-party tools, you can do that same recording but zoom in on areas, edit
the video, highlight some areas and blur others.
None of it is quite as fast as taking the odd instant screen shot, but none
of it is really time-consuming -unless you want it to be.
If you choose, you can make an entire YouTube-style video presentation and
actually, maybe that would be good. Perhaps you've got staff who need to do
something a certain way for you, maybe nobody stays with your firm long
enough to do it twice. Or maybe it's a job for you that is crucial, yet it's
also a once in a year kind of thing.

The basics on iOS
There have been ways to film your iPhone or iPad screens before, but from
iOS 11, Apple made it particularly easy -so long as you know where to look.

Once you've added it to Control Center, recording is a matter of tapping the
Record button
What you need is the Screen Recording feature. It may be named very clearly
and obviously, and using it is going to be extremely easy, but finding it is
none of these things.
This Screen Recording feature is an optional part of Control Center. 

.       Go to Settings on your iPhone, iPod touch or iPad

.       Tap on Control Center

.       Choose Customize Controls

.       From the bottom list, More Controls, find Screen Recording

.       Tap the green plus sign next to it

This screen recorder will be added to Control Center. So now whenever you
swipe down from the very top right of your device to call up this Control
Center, you'll see the Screen Recording button there.
To record your iOS device's screen, tap that button, and you'll get a
three-second countdown in the button's icon. From then until you tap the
button again, anything you do on your device will be recorded.
When you are done, tap the button again. The resulting video is saved to
your Camera Roll.

The basics on Mac
Press Command-Shift-5 on your Mac. This brings up the toolbar of options for
taking screenshots, but it also includes video settings. The middle section
of icons features one button for recording your entire screen and another
for recording part of it.
Make your choice, and as soon as you've clicked on either of these buttons,
you get a new one at the far right of the toolbar, called Record.
If you've clicked to record only part of the screen, you will also get a
highlighted box showing you which portion will be recorded. That box has
grab handles and you can resize or move it anywhere you need. 

Command-Shift-5 brings up the Mac's screenshot and screen recording options
Then click Record and that portion, or the entire screen, will be recorded.
There'll be a Stop icon in your menu bar and that will be recorded along
with everything else.
When you click it, the recording stops and you get a brief glimpse of a
thumbnail-sized image at the bottom right of your Mac's screen. Click on
that and you can do the same markups and sharing of the video that you could
with screenshots.
If you don't do this right away, you can later on find the screen recording
saved on your desktop.
You can change where it's saved, and select other settings such as a timer
countdown before the recording starts, by click on the Options drop down in
the screen recording toolbar.
Very nicely, if you later come to record a portion of the screen, macOS will
start off assuming it's the same portion. 
That's one big advantage over the older way of doing it, which was to record
your screen using QuickTime Player. You can still do that -launch the app,
choose File and New Screen Recording -and it can record the whole or a
portion of screen just as it ever did, but it doesn't remember the portion.
Yet QuickTime Player is still good to keep around, because right now it is
the only way in software to record your Apple TV's screen.

The basics on Apple TV
On a Mac that's on the same Wi-Fi network as your Apple TV, launch QuickTime
Player. Choose File and then New Movie Recording -that's Movie, not Screen
recording.
If you have a camera on your Mac, then you'll see yourself and a control
strip with a red Record button. If you don't have a camera, you'll have a
small blank image with that button on it.

.       Click on the down arrow to the right of the button

.       Select your Apple TV in the Camera list that appears

.       Click Record

That's Apple TV being streamed to a Mac and recorded by QuickTime Player.
Just walk to your living room instead.
This does not actually start the recording, but rather it tells your Apple
TV that you want to record. The Apple TV will first show a code number that
you need to enter into QuickTime Player to authorize the recording. Then,
Apple TV displays a notice explicitly asking the viewer to Allow someone to
record it, or not.
Assuming that viewer is you and that you're up for this, once you click on
Allow, certain things happen. Anyone watching that Apple TV will now see
their regular screen plus a very big, very bright red border around the edge
of the whole screen. They'll also find that their audio is switched off. You
could find yourself unpopular.
On your Mac, QuickTime Player will be recording the Apple TV screen -without
that red border. 
It is possible to hear and record audio, too. In that same dropdown where
you chose your Apple TV as the camera, there's another section for
Microphone. It, too, will list your Apple TV and you can select it as the
source to record.
However, you'll have to go back through entering an authorization number and
clicking Allow before it will work.
In our experience, it's not worth it. Your mileage may vary, but even in
general use such as relaying YouTube videos from Apple TV this way, we
regularly find video is great but the audio quality is choppy. Plus the
recording is prone to stopping, not always for an obvious reason. 
And you get oddities such as sometimes the audio won't play while you're
recording, but it will when you then play that back. 
Plus certain services such as Netflix are blocked from this working so you
just end up recording a silent blank screen. 
So while this is in theory a way to watch Apple TV on your Mac, save
yourself the bother and wait for the forthcoming Apple TV Mac app instead.
At least you'll definitely hear that, and you'll be able to click controls
instead of hoping your remote is still in range of your TV.
That said, for explaining how to, say, set up AirPlay speakers or route TV
audio to your HomePod, screen-recording Apple TV is always going to be
handy.
Third-party apps
Apple has made taking screen-recordings on iOS and Mac much easier, but
there have long been third-party apps such as ScreenFlow that will do it
too.

ScreenFlow is a screen recording app and a strong video editor too
ScreenFlow is still the better choice if you're going to be making a lot of
screen recordings, or if those recordings are going to be long. It's now a
reasonably fully-fledged video editor, which means it's easy to cut together
short recordings of long jobs.
You can see how taking screen recordings is useful, and now you can see that
it's easy, too.
Let us give you just one word of advice, though. Remember to stop the
recording when you're done. It is ridiculously easy on the Mac, especially,
to forget. You come in the next morning and your Mac is complaining that
it's low on storage space -because you've just recorded 15 hours of video.

Original Article at:
https://appleinsider.com/articles/19/08/24/how-to-take-screen-recordings-on-
mac-ios-and-apple-tv



-- 
The following information is important for all members of the Mac Visionaries 
list.

If you have any questions or concerns about the running of this list, or if you 
feel that a member's post is inappropriate, please contact the owners or 
moderators directly rather than posting on the list itself.

Your Mac Visionaries list moderator is Mark Taylor.  You can reach mark at:  
[email protected] and your owner is Cara Quinn - you can reach Cara at 
[email protected]

The archives for this list can be searched at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"MacVisionaries" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/macvisionaries/000601d55b7d%24dcf65b30%2496e31190%24%40edu.

Reply via email to