Tommy-

You may want to try Macromedia's FlashMX. According to their website version 6 seems to support what you want, minus the screen capture itself. But (I'm speculating) you could import the Quicktime MOV captured with Snapz ProX.

From: http://www.macromedia.com/software/flash/productinfo/features/mx/03rich_media_support.html#1

Video Support
Create distinctive rich content and applications that incorporate video. Import any standard
video file supported by QuickTime or Windows Media Player, including MPEG, DV (Digital Video),
MOV (QuickTime), and AVI. Manipulate, scale, rotate, skew, mask, and animate video objects, and
make them interactive using scripting. Video is natively supported in Macromedia Flash Player 6 with the addition of the Sorenson Spark codec.

I've seen the power of Macromaedia's Director and Flash development capabilities. It's pretty awesome.

Regards,
Cassj



On Tuesday, January 21, 2003, at 04:44 AM, William T. Simmons wrote:

To all those who responded as quoted below, thanks! However, screen capture
is not the problem (I've got SnapzPro X and love it), but rather taking the
captures and building a Flash movie that also shows interpolated mouse
movements and clicks, basically, a software video camera that outputs to SWF
format. Someone mentioned (off-list) Adobe's LiveMotion as a great media
import and SWF building tool for the Mac, but it doesn't offer integrated
screen capturing. I guess I'm looking for a dedicated tool that does it all:
screen captures, frame modifications and effects, and SWF generation. Any
ideas along those lines?
Thanks again,
Tommy Simmons
Employment Law Advisory Network
www.employmentlawadvisors.com

----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 21, 2003 2:12 AM
Subject: use-revolution digest, Vol 1 #1045 - 16 msgs
...what equivalent tool exists for the Mac? RoboDemo basically takes
screenshots of selected regions of a screen, or of selected windows...

Tommy,
RoboDemo for Windows = Command-Shift-4 on Mac. :)
Rcf
--------------
Charles,

It's not apple-shift-3? Works here for me... or is yours the one that
allows you to select a portion of the screen for capture?

Judy

-------------->
Judy-

Pardon me for butting in...

In Mac OS 9: apple-shift-3 (no cursor change): takes PICT snapshot
of the entire screen
apple-shift-4 (cursor changes to cross-hair): takes PICT snapshot
of selected area of the screen
apple-shift-4-capslock: (cursor changes to bulls-eye): takes PICT
snapshot of just the Finder window clicked on.

In Mac OS X: apple-shift-3 (no cursor change): takes PDF snapshot of
the entire screen
apple-shift-4 (cursor changes to cross-hair): takes PDF snapshot of
selected area of the screen
It appears that the "capslock" window capture feature is gone in Mac
OS X.

Snapz-Pro (http://www.ambrosiasw.com/utilities/snapzprox/) is great for
this kind of thing.
You can even grab MOVies of your Desktop antics.

Regards,
Cassj :-)


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