Archive for the ‘Professional Screencaster’ Category

A professional screencast for Timebridge & Evernote

Friday, January 29th, 2010
the Timebridge/Evernote screencast by Scraster Professional Screencasting

One of the most gradifying aspeccts of professional screencasting is being exposed to so many cool new apps and web services. This professional screencast Scraster recently finished introduced us to two cool new applications–first, our newest client Timebridge and second, a popular app with which TimeBridge has partnered, called Evernote.

TimeBridge is a web app that makes it easier to “schedule and run great meetings”. Through an integration with your desktop or web-based Calendar client, Timebridge users are able to see each other’s availabilities and plan accordingly. No more sending invitations back and forth through email. There’s also a number of ways that TimeBridge can improve the organizational process of putting a meeting together. Who doesn’t need TimeBridge?

Evernote is a popular desktop and mobile app that is said to serve as your “external brain”. It’s pretty damn unbelieveable. Evernote takes OCR to another (almost sfi-fi) level, whereby you can take a picture of something textual with your iPhone and viola-it goes right into your searchable Evernote archive. There’s a lot more, so do yourself a favor and visit the Evernote website.

Scraster is happy to be working with Timebridge on a few other videos to explain how the tool integrates with major email clients. We’re happy that the Timebridge team realizes how effective video can be in their goal of reaching a critical mass with their platform, whose true strength is in the growing number of people that use it.

If your organization has an online product or service that could benefit from a professional screencast, get a free quote from Scraster Professional Screencasting today. You can also email us at info@scraster.com or find us on Twitter at @scraster.

professional iPhone app screencast for VoiceMark

Thursday, January 7th, 2010
    VoiceMark: a professional iPhone app screencast by Scraster Professional Screencasting

    Most of the inquiries coming to Scraster’s inbox these days are for iPhone and mobile screencasts. The demand for mobile app demonstrations is as limitless as that industry’s growth, so it’s a good time to be in Scraster’s position–we have the resources and the skill to be producing some of the best mobile app screencasts online. As our vids circulate and catch eyeballs, developers are lining up to get their own.

    Scraster’s latest iPhone app screencast was produced for VoiceMark, the flagship app of a sharp software firm called GeoGrafffiti. Voice Mark by GeoGraffiti is an iPhone app used to record voice messages about a specific locations. Voice Marks are geotagged to a point of interest and made available for the public to hear via any telephone. The script reads, “With an iPhone3G, it’s easy to Voice Mark the world and create audio geotags with your opinions and advice… or search and listen to Voice Marks already created in your specific area of interest”. You can download the app (it’s free!) at geograffiti.com.

    Scraster had fun producing this cool iphone screencast to introduce VoiceMark. We were given the liberty of adding some personal touches, like including the VoiceMark of a friend for the audio demonstration portion of the video. We also got to throw in a plug for Yoshi’s, our favorite Oakland jazz club, and use some of our other favorite spots around town for the VoiceMarks we created to demonstrate the app.

    One of the bigger challenges of producing professional screencasts is keeping the viewer visually engaged when there are lulls in screen action, for which we have a few strategies. The first is utilizing zooms, which give the video a sense of screen action where there is none. Highlighting screen areas also works in this way. Animation can sustain the video between sections of screen capture, but animation is very time consuming and is most often cost prohibitive for the client.

    Another effective method of spicing up video lulls in screencasts is to use the font of the client’s brand to create eye-popping text overlays to spice things up. The enhanced text seen in the VoiceMark video, which was all created in Photoshop using GeoGraffiti’s style guidelines, really pops and adds a lot to the video. The animated transitions of the text makes it all the more effective.

    VoiceMark CEO Chad Cook came to Scraster with a great looking app and brand identity, and Scraster took the ball and ran with it to create something that Chad hadn’t imagined. We were happy to receive the following testimonial from Chad:

    “The results Scraster delivered exceeded expectations with original ideas and solutions, all within budget and deadlines. They are experts in the field of screencast demonstration”

    If your organization has an iPhone app or an online product or service that could benefit from a professional screencast like the one we created for VoiceMark, via email or on Twitter. Wanna share the VoiceMark video with your networks? Here’s some tweetage (92 characters) for your convenience:

    Here’s a nice looking iPhone app screencast demo produced by @scraster: http://bit.ly/8lqcSn

    Thanks for reading. More real soon!

a professional screencast website tour for WorldPoliticsReview.com

Monday, December 7th, 2009
World Politics Review screencast by Scraster Professional Screencasting

Scraster Professional Screencasting recently produced a screencast for World Politics Review, a premium provider of information and analysis on international affairs found online at worldpoliticsreview.com. The general manager at WPR approached Scraster with a familiar problem among paid-content websites: “We have all this great content behind our homepage, but we’re afraid people don’t know it’s there”. It was the objective of WPR to create a site tour that would show off the site, inside and out. WPR wrote most of the screencast script, and Scraster took control from there. The end result is an engaging screencast that servers two main purposes. First, the video is a introduction of WPR to new visitors who are unfamiliar with how to navigate the content-rich free side of the site. As well as giving unsubscribed visitors a cursory tour of the free content, the later part of the WPR screencast invites free users to consider the many benefits of WPR’s premium subscription service, which include a wealth of additional reports, downloads, and other exclusive content.

If you manage subscription-based website or have a premium online product or service that could benefit from a professional screencast like WPR’s, please visit Scraster’s Get a Free Quote page today. You can also email us at info@scraster.com.

Thanks for sharing this World Politics Review video with others. Here is some short text that is handy for tweets:
>> Check out the new screencast from @scraster at http://scraster.com/wpr <<

Need a professional screencast or demo for your iPhone app? Scraster has you covered.

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

iPhone app screencast demo Scraster Professional ScreencastingThe current count of iPhone apps available for download is around 100,000. That is a remarkable stat that. Millions of people are downloading apps to their iPhones each day. How, then, is an app developer supposed to rise above the fray and distinguish their product amongst so many others? With a professional screencast demo from Scraster. Scraster Professional Screencasting is happy to extend its expert production services to the iPhone realm. Clients who are serious about taking the marketing of their iPhone app to the next level are invited to contact Scraster for a free quote.

Chris Strode, creator of the popular Invoice2go iPhone app, recently attempted to create a screencast demo in-house. He didn’t think it’d be difficult and was aware of the challenges of passing off an iPhone project. It didn’t take long for Chris to come to the point in the road that many others Scraster clients have come to before reaching out to us–he realized that his skills are best spent on the development end of things, and that the production of a professional-looking video that effectively demonstrated his hard work would be best left to a professional service that could do the app justice. Scraster was happy to help, and Chris was surprised to find that the roadblocks involving the privacy of his source code could easily be averted. Invoice2go ended up with a stunning video.

Producing iPhone app screencasts is, for many reasons, more difficult than traditional screencasting. First, it requires the download and installation of the enormous iPhone SDK and Xcode development environment just to access the iPhone Simulator. The next challenge is getting an app for demonstration installed to the Simulator without the source code. There’s a pretty good tutorial on this subject at thegadgets.net.

Since users of the Simulator can’t install and run apps for which they don’t have code, a lot of amateur scrasts using the Simulator look crumby–the iPhone looks naked and unnatural with no carrier and no apps. Atebits (creators of Tweetie, the popular Twitter client) provided the iPhone screencasting community a gift last spring with the public release a simple but handy tool called SimFinger, “a bundle of little tricks to make a screencapture of the iPhone Simulator suck less”. SimFinger allows iPhone screencasters the ability to load up the iPhone with “fake” apps and also creates the small white cursor effect meant to emulate finger presses, which you’ve probably seen in a lot of well-produced iPhone app scrasts recently. Scraster has hacked its way around several of SimFinger’s limitiations–such as its fixed white background and locked placement of the iPhone to the far left of the desktop–to create the perfect environment for slick looking iPhone video screen capture.

For Scraster’s most recent iPhone app screencast, we were psyched to get our hands on the new ScreenFlow 2. The much-anticipated software update released on October 26th includes the promising feature of being able to speed up clips on the timeline. This has always been possible in advanced video editors like FinalCut, but is unique to screencasting software. It’s clutch for things like iPhone screencasts, where the viewer shouldn’t be made to sit through your screen actions in realtime.

Unfortunately, Scraster found ScreenFlow 2’s clip speed feature to be severely… maddeningly… buggy, and very close to the point of completely dysfunctional. The actual clip speed feature itself worked passably, but when speed was applied to clips on the timeline, audio processing would be effected. There would be either an unacceptable delay in the audio during playback, or the audio would be dropped out all together. The upshot is that ScreenFlow 2’s support team and developers were very responsive to the issue and Scraster has a beta version of the v2.0.2 that proves the known issue will be remedied with the next update. Although the speed transform feature wasn’t ready for prime time at ScreenFlow 2’s (delayed) release and nearly did our heads in, we ended up creating one of our nicest videos to date and the client was ecstatic. And at the end of the day (or week), the client’s approval and the size of their smile is all that matters.

Scraster’s tagline says, “You’ve got better things to do. Scraster does screencasts”. This has never been more true than in the case of professional quality iPhone app screencasting, which throws a couple more monkey wrenches into an already challenging process. Scraster Professional Screencasting offers a cost-effective way to bring our client’s premium iPhone apps into the limelight where they belong. If you’re frustrated with how your in-house iPhone app screencasting is going or you’d like to leave demonstration production to the pros from the get-go, contact Scraster for a free quote today. You’ve got better things to do. Scraster does iPhone app screencasts.
scraster iphone app screencast demo

Scraster awarded Camtasia blog’s “Screencast of the Week” honor

Monday, October 26th, 2009
Sunday Morning by Scraster Professional Screencasting

The Visual Lounge, the blog of Camtasia’s parent company TechSmith, named Scraster’s video called Sunday Morning their “Screencast of the Week” yesterday. Part of what TechSmith appreciated about Sunday Morning was how it stretched their software to do something that it wasn’t particularly intended to do. Sunday Morning is more of a slideshow than a screencast, but if there’s no “Slideshow of the Week” honors and it was produced with a screencasting software, let’s call it a screencast! The video, which chronicles the pregnancy of a good friend in a “time lapse” kind of way, is viewable from the player to the left. It’s just one minute long, so please enjoy it before you leave.

As Scraster team leader John Basile explained to Betsy Weber of the Visual Lounge, “I enjoyed using Camtasia for Mac over other slideshow softwares with which I’ve worked because it allows for more control and detail when timing images to audio.” The drag-and-droppable transitions this blog has mentioned before are really tight and are a HUGE timesaver. The movies export nicely to a QuickTime format and there’s a ton of export options to get it to look just right.

As many readers are probably aware, ScreenFlow 2 is set to be released any day now and will have the same kind of time-saving, built-in transitions. Scraster attempted but failed to get its hands on a beta version of ScreenFlow 2 last week, but has been promised a copy to review here and at the scrast.net blog upon its release. Check back for that soon. (Soon? Hope so.)

Scraster is in the business of producing professional screencast tutorials, demos, and marketing videos. Although team leader John Basile produced Sunday Morning as a fun and thoughtful gift for close friends, it’s something we’re happy to add to our menu of services. If you have a multimedia project in mind and think that Scraster would be a good fit to make things come to life for you, please be in touch with Scraster at info@scraster.com of Get a Free Quote.