If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
Hi,
I was looking for an ap for WinXP to record the video from the screen on my PC. I downloaded "MOVAVI Screen Recorder" V9 for Windows (includes WinXP), but after installing, I could not get it to "run". On one PC, I saw a message that it could not locate entry point of a certain (forgot to write name) .DLL. I installed it on another PC. After installing, when I tried to launch it, I saw a message that it could not "initialize"!!! Does anyone know of a good WinXP video recorder for the screen? Thank You in advance, John |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
jaugustine wrote:
Does anyone know of a good WinXP video recorder for the screen? http://applian.com/replay-video-capture/ However, a screen capture tool will also record every artifact that occurs during the recording, like jerkiness or halts in playback (due to buffering), the mouse moving across the screen (you forgot you were recording a region of the screen), or anything you see will also be in the recording. If you are trying to capture video *streams* from media sites then you need to use a stream recorder, like: http://applian.com/replay-media-catcher/ I've tried free screen and stream recorders and found them to be crap. You never stipulated that suggestions must be for free products. I gave up on the freebies and went with something that actually works and does so reliably. Media Catcher is frequently getting updated to accomodate media sites that change how they present their streamed media. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
wrote:
Hi, I was looking for an ap for WinXP to record the video from the screen on my PC. I downloaded "MOVAVI Screen Recorder" V9 for Windows (includes WinXP), but after installing, I could not get it to "run". On one PC, I saw a message that it could not locate entry point of a certain (forgot to write name) .DLL. I installed it on another PC. After installing, when I tried to launch it, I saw a message that it could not "initialize"!!! Does anyone know of a good WinXP video recorder for the screen? Thank You in advance, John https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compar...sting_software ( a second source is http://www.videohelp.com/software/se...screen-capture ) CamStudio - free Relatively easy to use. Used to have a 4GB limit (AVI with no AVI2 extension) Open source, but one source file is missing (cannot escape adware by building your own copy in Visual Studio). Wikipedia article mentions "OpenCandy", packaging with adware. There was a promise to implement AVI2, but some coders who worked on the software, added dual-screen capture as a feature instead. Download a current copy, and see if it's clean enough to use. ******* FRAPS is the most technically capable of all the tools. It's commercial. But only works 100% up to Windows 7. Win8/Win10 added some barriers to video capture from all three rendering planes. ******* I use FFMPEG. You don't want to use FFMPEG :-) Command line invocation. ******* To record Adobe Flash video, disable "Hardware Acceleration" in the plugin. There are (at least) three rendering planes: 1) 2D desktop (what FFMPEG will get me for sure). 2) VMR7/VMR9 video planes. 3) DirectX3D plane. FRAPS records all three planes. NVidia ShadowPlay can record (3). I think some MSI Freebie offered (3) as well. Where an output tool has a discretionary choice for render plane, you may be able to change the render plane, so the screen capture tool you use doesn't get a "green square". In Windows 7, disable Aero Transparency thing, for lowest overheads during capture. In Win8/Win10, GDI capture has a 30FPS limit. In Win7 you can go higher than that. Have fun, Paul |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
On Tue, 6 Mar 2018 19:46:46 +0000, "J. P. Gilliver (John)"
wrote: In message , writes: Hi, I was looking for an ap for WinXP to record the video from the screen on my PC. I downloaded "MOVAVI Screen Recorder" V9 for Windows (includes WinXP), but after installing, I could not get it to "run". On one PC, I saw a message that it could not locate entry point of a certain (forgot to write name) .DLL. I installed it on another PC. After installing, when I tried to launch it, I saw a message that it could not "initialize"!!! Does anyone know of a good WinXP video recorder for the screen? Thank You in advance, John What are you wanting to do? If it's copy playing videos, I have no suggestions. If you just want to record the screen, or part of it, for making tutorials on how to use software (or show some dumb company how their website _actually_ works [or doesn't]), then I've found this reasonable: http://www.nchsoftware.com/capture/index.html When I installed it on my old XP machine, with the default settings, it recorded at about 1 frame per second, though with acceptable audio (so OK for tutorial); I think I was able to make it go faster. I see from the above page that it still claims to work on XP. I never paid anything for it; I don't know if it's still free, or never was other than a trial, or is but for private use only. I've no idea how it compared to others; it did what I wanted, so I never looked at others. If you just want a screen capture, print screen key works fine for me. It parks a JPG in the clip board at your current screen resolution. If I want a better picture, in something that supports it, set the screen to max pixel size your machine can handle and record that. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
On Tue, 6 Mar 2018 13:29:45 -0600, VanguardLH wrote:
jaugustine wrote: Does anyone know of a good WinXP video recorder for the screen? http://applian.com/replay-video-capture/ However, a screen capture tool will also record every artifact that occurs during the recording, like jerkiness or halts in playback (due to buffering), the mouse moving across the screen (you forgot you were recording a region of the screen), or anything you see will also be in the recording. If you are trying to capture video *streams* from media sites then you need to use a stream recorder, like: http://applian.com/replay-media-catcher/ I've tried free screen and stream recorders and found them to be crap. You never stipulated that suggestions must be for free products. I gave up on the freebies and went with something that actually works and does so reliably. Media Catcher is frequently getting updated to accomodate media sites that change how they present their streamed media. $50, not horrible if it works. I may do the trial first but it looks like something I can use. Does it do Netflix and Amazon sort of stuff? Amazon seems to have good retention and we buy a lot of them but things come and go on Netflix. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
Does anyone know of a good WinXP video recorder for the screen? http://applian.com/replay-video-capture/ However, a screen capture tool will also record every artifact that occurs during the recording, like jerkiness or halts in playback (due to buffering), the mouse moving across the screen (you forgot you were recording a region of the screen), or anything you see will also be in the recording. If you are trying to capture video *streams* from media sites then you need to use a stream recorder, like: http://applian.com/replay-media-catcher/ I've tried free screen and stream recorders and found them to be crap. You never stipulated that suggestions must be for free products. I gave up on the freebies and went with something that actually works and does so reliably. Media Catcher is frequently getting updated to accomodate media sites that change how they present their streamed media. Hi, Sorry, I forgot to mention that I am willing to pay for it. John |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
SNIP
I use FFMPEG. You don't want to use FFMPEG :-) Command line invocation. Hi Paul, Because you said, "I use FFMPEG", I will give that a try. I do not mind "Command line invocation". Thanks again, John |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
|
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
SNIP
I use FFMPEG. You don't want to use FFMPEG :-) Command line invocation. Hi Paul, Because you said, "I use FFMPEG", I will give that a try. I do not mind "Command line invocation". Thanks again, John Hi Paul, You are CORRECT, "You don't want to use FFMPEG". I thought you launch this "ap" (not an "ap"), via "Run" (Command Prompt) with a "command tail". John |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
wrote:
SNIP I use FFMPEG. You don't want to use FFMPEG :-) Command line invocation. Hi Paul, Because you said, "I use FFMPEG", I will give that a try. I do not mind "Command line invocation". Thanks again, John Hi Paul, You are CORRECT, "You don't want to use FFMPEG". I thought you launch this "ap" (not an "ap"), via "Run" (Command Prompt) with a "command tail". John It's not that bad. To shoot video at one frame per second, when timing software completion, I use this as a command. This places screenshots in the current working directory. I open the folder of JPG files with Avidemux 2.5, and click the play button to see my "movie" or output to another video format (if necessary). Doing it this way, I can do demos of stuff, and just stop for a second, allow FFMPEG to catch a screenshot, then select individual frames later to make documentation. I could, say, select a00103.jpg, a00205.jpg and a10000.jpg and upload them to PostImg. C:\FFMPEG\bin\ffmpeg -framerate 1 -f gdigrab -i desktop -f image2 -q:v 1 -c:v mjpeg a%05d.jpg You can timestamp the video. The movie here can be played with "ffplay" (if you're lucky). I've played with "raw" capture mode just for fun - but it's not compatible with anything else really. C:\FFMPEG\bin\ffmpeg -framerate 60 -f gdigrab -i desktop -vf drawtext=fontfile=arial.ttf:fontsize=14:fontcolor= :x=08:y=466:text=%{p ts}..%{localtime} -vcodec rawvideo -pix_fmt bgr24 F:\out.mov For sound and video, you first "discover" the name of the sound device. ffmpeg -list_devices true -f dshow -i dummy # Name of sound first... ffmpeg -f dshow -list_options true -i audio="SoundMAX HD Audio" # Number of channels etc With the name of the sound, now I can capture a portion of my screen in real time. I might use this for Youtube Flash, once HW Acceleration in Flash is turned off. ffmpeg -offset_x 0 -offset_y 480 -video_size 720x480 -framerate 60 -f gdigrab -i desktop -f dshow -sample_rate 44100 -i audio="SoundMAX HD Audio" -q:v 1 -vcodec mjpeg -acodec pcm_s16le out.avi The first row is pretty obvious. Not stating offset and dimensions causes the whole screen to be captured. The second line states the video source. The third line states the raw sound source. The fourth line specified "high quality", as a Q of 1 is no-compression and a Q of 32 is high-compression-fuzzy. Q:V means Quality of Video. The MJPEG codec is multithreaded. If you have a four core processor, FFMPEG will work on compressing four frames at a time. I don't think there is any temporal compression, so a good disk is needed for the storage rate. The audio codec is pretty standard for windows, with the LE standing for "little Endian". The choice of AVI is OK, as I suspect FFMPEG has AVI2 support and once the file is past 4GB in size, it will be using AVI2 features. For software, I use: https://ffmpeg.zeranoe.com/builds/ Click 3.4.2 Click Windows 32 bit (for WinXP) Click Static Hold mouse over the Blue bar and verify the filename. Click Blue bar and start download. I unpack mine and keep it in C:\FFMPEG for no particular reason. That's a very basic set of commands for screen capture. ******* Making a two-pass DVD segment, looks like this. The aspect ratio choice might have been because I was using WinTV video tape capture or something. These numbers wouldn't be "official" DVD, but they're headed in that direction. And this is video format conversion, not screen capture. It's possible the "target" command is including other details about MPEG2 or whatever. The first pass outputs a file (not named there) which carries "rate" info which is used during the second pass. The quality is adjusted down on the second pass, so the stated "buffer" doesn't overflow. ffmpeg -i G:\WORK\Star_Wars_New_Hope_20113.avi -target ntsc-dvd -aspect 4:3 -g 12 -b:v 3900k -maxrate 8000000 -minrate 0 -bufsize 1835008 -pass 1 -y NUL ffmpeg -i G:\WORK\Star_Wars_New_Hope_20113.avi -target ntsc-dvd -aspect 4:3 -g 12 -b:v 3900k -maxrate 8000000 -minrate 0 -bufsize 1835008 -pass 2 F:\output.vob FFMPEG is the Swiss army knife of video. "Even if you don't get any results, you'll have a hobby." Paul |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
On Tue, 06 Mar 2018 12:46:20 -0500, wrote:
Hi, I was looking for an ap for WinXP to record the video from the screen on my PC. I downloaded "MOVAVI Screen Recorder" V9 for Windows (includes WinXP), but after installing, I could not get it to "run". On one PC, I saw a message that it could not locate entry point of a certain (forgot to write name) .DLL. I installed it on another PC. After installing, when I tried to launch it, I saw a message that it could not "initialize"!!! Does anyone know of a good WinXP video recorder for the screen? Thank You in advance, John FastStone capture http://www.faststone.org/FSCaptureDetail.htm I use it mainly for images and scrolling webpages, but it can do video captures. []'s -- Don't be evil - Google 2004 We have a new policy - Google 2012 |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
On Wed, 07 Mar 2018 21:55:57 -0300, Shadow wrote:
On Tue, 06 Mar 2018 12:46:20 -0500, wrote: Hi, I was looking for an ap for WinXP to record the video from the screen on my PC. I downloaded "MOVAVI Screen Recorder" V9 for Windows (includes WinXP), but after installing, I could not get it to "run". On one PC, I saw a message that it could not locate entry point of a certain (forgot to write name) .DLL. I installed it on another PC. After installing, when I tried to launch it, I saw a message that it could not "initialize"!!! Does anyone know of a good WinXP video recorder for the screen? Thank You in advance, John FastStone capture http://www.faststone.org/FSCaptureDetail.htm I use it mainly for images and scrolling webpages, but it can do video captures. []'s I forgot -- it only does WMV If you want MP4 (and a few others), there's Gilisoft Screen Recorder. http://www.gilisoft.com/product-video-recorder.htm Both work fine here on XP. []'s -- Don't be evil - Google 2004 We have a new policy - Google 2012 |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
Why not give Microsoft Encoder 4 Free version a try. It used to run on XP when I was using it. I also have it in Windows 10. It's one of the best around as far as I can see. Here's the video to get hang of it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_YNGUgsERc Hi Good Guy, Youtube video is not as good as getting the instructions for using MS Encoder. I will search for the program, WinXP version. Thanks again, John With all Microsoft products, Intelligence is required from the user's part so if you are challenged by new technologies then don't waste your time on Microsoft. Alternative is: Screencast-O-Matic https://screencast-o-matic.com/ There is a download version as well. /--- This email has been checked for viruses by Windows Defender software. //https://www.microsoft.com/en-gb/windows/comprehensive-security/ |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
Good Screen Recoder (video) for WinXP
I was looking for an ap for WinXP to record the video from the screen on
my PC. I downloaded "MOVAVI Screen Recorder" V9 for Windows (includes WinXP), but after installing, I could not get it to "run". On one PC, I saw a message that it could not locate entry point of a certain (forgot to write name) .DLL. I installed it on another PC. After installing, when I tried to launch it, I saw a message that it could not "initialize"!!! Does anyone know of a good WinXP video recorder for the screen? Thank You in advance, John FastStone capture http://www.faststone.org/FSCaptureDetail.htm I use it mainly for images and scrolling webpages, but it can do video captures. []'s I forgot -- it only does WMV If you want MP4 (and a few others), there's Gilisoft Screen Recorder. http://www.gilisoft.com/product-video-recorder.htm Both work fine here on XP. []'s Hi Shadow, For clarification, I want to record VIDEO off the screen. That "movavi screen recorder" has a great feature, you can select what part of the screen to record video. I NEVER received an answer from them regarding my issue. I don't mind WMV, so I downloaded FastStone. I will give that a try and report back later. Thanks again, John .. |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|