applications.linux.com — How many times has someone verbally explained how to do something on a computer to you? How many times do you end up asking them to just show you? For these situations there is pyvnc2swf, a program that turns screen input into video files. Let's see just how easy it is to use it to producing training videos.
Sep 22, 2006 View in Crawl 4
kee440Sep 23, 2006
Not the best product name, but it seems cool.
rastorizeSep 23, 2006
Try 'Wink' for Windows - may not be as feature-rich as Camtasia, but it's free and works really well for tutorial and presentation creation - <a class="user" href="http://www.debugmode.com/wink/">http://www.debugmode.com/wink/</a>
estacadoSep 23, 2006
I use CamStudio: <a class="user" href="http://www.camstudio.org/">http://www.camstudio.org/</a> . Free & open source. I tried Wink, but it doesn't work right on my system for some reason.
ptknightSep 23, 2006
In a way, he's got a point...In the begining of Digg, this would be a dup. Period.
punerSep 23, 2006
Wink is very good. Im new to it and found it pretty easy to use. I used Camtasia before but my video would be laggy when i played it. With Wink its not a video but a flash file so it cant be laggy.
mittermayrSep 23, 2006
I tested a few different video recording systems and produced some videos / tutorials, all free downloadable here: <a class="user" href="http://www.vipedio.com">http://www.vipedio.com</a>