Btw, there seem to be many Haskells on YouTube - should we have
some way of marking clips related to our Haskell? I've used haskell.org
as a tag, but noone else has, yet - also, perhaps there should be a Haskell
channel or something?
And just in case there are others on the same Windows
Is there anyone here with experience in screencasting of text-based
applications, who could offer advice on how to produce screencasts
on windows/xp? The basic screencasting (capture+annotation/editing)
is not the problem, eg, CamStudio seems ok, and Wink gives me
more control for mostly
On Tue, Mar 31, 2009 at 03:01:52PM +0100, Claus Reinke wrote:
Is there anyone here with experience in screencasting of text-based
applications, who could offer advice on how to produce screencasts
on windows/xp? The basic screencasting (capture+annotation/editing)
is not the problem, eg,
From: haskell-cafe-boun...@haskell.org
[mailto:haskell-cafe-boun...@haskell.org] On Behalf Of Claus Reinke
The problem comes when trying to scale down the size to
what would fit in a browser window (what a viewer would see,
without having to scroll around) - text becomes hard to read
Cool! Thanks, Don. I enjoyed the show :)
Duane Johnson
On Mar 24, 2009, at 2:20 AM, Don Stewart wrote:
Hey guys,
I've been making quick youtube videos of projects to convey what they
do. Here, for example, using Tim Docker's Charts library in ghci:
Hey guys,
I've been making quick youtube videos of projects to convey what they
do. Here, for example, using Tim Docker's Charts library in ghci:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Lqzygxvus0
(Click on the HD button for higher res).
Or one of Neil Brown's SG OpenGL graphics library,
Perhaps the make a video slogan doesn't quite explain what is
intended - it didn't to me!-) Reading John Udell's short article
What is Screencasting?
http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/digitalmedia/2005/11/16/what-is-screencasting.html?page=1
gave me a better idea: the screen video part is
claus.reinke:
Perhaps the make a video slogan doesn't quite explain what is
intended - it didn't to me!-) Reading John Udell's short article
What is Screencasting?
http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/digitalmedia/2005/11/16/what-is-screencasting.html?page=1
gave me a better idea: the