Right-click (Windows) or Control+click (Mac) media on timeline or canvas and select Cut.
Camtasia displays a green tab name for the currently selected tab. The group displays on a single track on the timeline.Ĭlick a tab to navigate between open groups or the main timeline. The group name displays in a tab above the timeline.Ĭollapse items within a group to a single track.Ĭlick the icon on the group tab above the timeline or press Control+Shift+U (Windows). Media within the group appear on separate tracks. OptionĮxpand a group on the timeline to view and edit media individually.Ĭlick the icon on the group on the timeline or click a group on the canvas and press Ctrl+Shift+G (Windows). Just animations of sorts.Īnyways! Getting back to the topic.Some groups in the default Camtasia library and on the TechSmith Assets for Camtasia website have editable properties such as title, subtitle, or shapes. Unfortunately, there was no technical timer. Post Edit 2: I don't have a shutterstock subscription. That should be addressed by enabling Vsync and setting it to 60Hz/fps. Post Edit 1: You stated about not being able to attain a consistent 60fps. Years ago (10-20?) I was more into the tech side of all this, but gave up caring since I had no plans to be a competitive gamer with measurable reflexes, and getting all hung up on framerates, USB input lag, etc. (Ref link: Frame rate - Wikipedia) I believe it's because of this you'll almost always have a slight variance. And there are, as you're aware, a variety of accepted framerates including fractional framerates. Not certain that it's any better than what I currently have.Īs for the capture rates, I believe I recall you or someone else posted a similar observation (complaint?) last year or so in a thread.Īnd yeah, there isn't a 1:1 correlation between display refresh rates (Hz) and timecode (frames). maybe this is a "close, but no cigar" solution. Now that I think about it.that's gonna be somewhat annoying because I'll have to show the timer, but then manually add text showing the converted time. This means I have to do some mathematic conversions. So instead of having 0:05.75 seconds, Techsmith's timer will be 0:05 45. I do like Audacity's timer a little better where it uses tenths/hundreths instead of frames for timecode. My show scripting software uses tenths/hundreths for timing, not frames. Those are just about perfect for my needs! Thanks! The ParameterTime Timestamp is more applicable for what I need since my media that needs a timer doesn't start at 0:00 on the timeline.
Here-s-Johnny, I didn't know those elements were in the 2022 library. Kayakman, I don't appear to have a "clock" app as part of the base image. I saw nice timers you could for a fee from Shutterstock, how well the work when placed on a timeline? Thats the takeaway to me, recording a timer is subjective and highly prone to errors.Ĭreating one from scratch may be the best solution.
I could only manage to capture this online recorder at 59.95 fps. Using my current card, Nvidia's Geforce recorder. I ordered a better graphics card just yesterday. And gamers will break the bank, go all out and build rigs that put most office computers to shame. When gamers play games, their fps are all over the place. Which means they can change the displayed image 60 times per second.ĭisplaying a consistent 60 fps is asking a lot and for all I know, may not happen for long stretches. Most monitors have a refresh rate of 60hz. Second, depending on the monitor your using. If closely scrutinized on a frame by frame basis. After a closer read and a good nights sleep.įor starters, Camtasia is variable frame rate recorder.In my experience frame rates are all over the place.