Hi!
Found this in  the saved mails I have  saved if I need them later.
Good Luck Andrew!


> Vidarebefordrat mejl:
> 
> Från: "M. Taylor" <mk...@ucla.edu>
> Ämne: How to take screen recordings on Mac, iOS and Apple TV, Apple Insider, 
> Front Page News
> Datum: 25 augusti 2019 21:47:00 CEST
> Till: <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com>
> Svara till: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
> 
> AppleInsider - Frontpage News - Saturday, August 24, 2019 at 11:11 AM
> How to take screen recordings on Mac, iOS and Apple TV
> 
> Tips
> Apple has provided ways to record videos of your Mac, iOS, and Apple TV
> screens, but it doesn't make it easy to figure out how to do it. Here's how
> to get it done.
> 
> Someone's clearly forgotten the phrase 'be kind, rewind'.
> Sometimes an image is not quite enough. If you want to show someone how to
> do something on their device -or you want to document a whole process -then
> you need more than a screengrab or screen shot. You need video. Apple has
> you covered for how to do this, and so do other companies.
> Without any third-party tools, you can record a video showing the screen on
> your Mac, your iOS device or even your Apple TV. Then with certain
> third-party tools, you can do that same recording but zoom in on areas, edit
> the video, highlight some areas and blur others.
> None of it is quite as fast as taking the odd instant screen shot, but none
> of it is really time-consuming -unless you want it to be.
> If you choose, you can make an entire YouTube-style video presentation and
> actually, maybe that would be good. Perhaps you've got staff who need to do
> something a certain way for you, maybe nobody stays with your firm long
> enough to do it twice. Or maybe it's a job for you that is crucial, yet it's
> also a once in a year kind of thing.
> 
> The basics on iOS
> There have been ways to film your iPhone or iPad screens before, but from
> iOS 11, Apple made it particularly easy -so long as you know where to look.
> 
> Once you've added it to Control Center, recording is a matter of tapping the
> Record button
> What you need is the Screen Recording feature. It may be named very clearly
> and obviously, and using it is going to be extremely easy, but finding it is
> none of these things.
> This Screen Recording feature is an optional part of Control Center. 
> 
> .     Go to Settings on your iPhone, iPod touch or iPad
> 
> .     Tap on Control Center
> 
> .     Choose Customize Controls
> 
> .     From the bottom list, More Controls, find Screen Recording
> 
> .     Tap the green plus sign next to it
> 
> This screen recorder will be added to Control Center. So now whenever you
> swipe down from the very top right of your device to call up this Control
> Center, you'll see the Screen Recording button there.
> To record your iOS device's screen, tap that button, and you'll get a
> three-second countdown in the button's icon. From then until you tap the
> button again, anything you do on your device will be recorded.
> When you are done, tap the button again. The resulting video is saved to
> your Camera Roll.
> 
> The basics on Mac
> Press Command-Shift-5 on your Mac. This brings up the toolbar of options for
> taking screenshots, but it also includes video settings. The middle section
> of icons features one button for recording your entire screen and another
> for recording part of it.
> Make your choice, and as soon as you've clicked on either of these buttons,
> you get a new one at the far right of the toolbar, called Record.
> If you've clicked to record only part of the screen, you will also get a
> highlighted box showing you which portion will be recorded. That box has
> grab handles and you can resize or move it anywhere you need. 
> 
> Command-Shift-5 brings up the Mac's screenshot and screen recording options
> Then click Record and that portion, or the entire screen, will be recorded.
> There'll be a Stop icon in your menu bar and that will be recorded along
> with everything else.
> When you click it, the recording stops and you get a brief glimpse of a
> thumbnail-sized image at the bottom right of your Mac's screen. Click on
> that and you can do the same markups and sharing of the video that you could
> with screenshots.
> If you don't do this right away, you can later on find the screen recording
> saved on your desktop.
> You can change where it's saved, and select other settings such as a timer
> countdown before the recording starts, by click on the Options drop down in
> the screen recording toolbar.
> Very nicely, if you later come to record a portion of the screen, macOS will
> start off assuming it's the same portion. 
> That's one big advantage over the older way of doing it, which was to record
> your screen using QuickTime Player. You can still do that -launch the app,
> choose File and New Screen Recording -and it can record the whole or a
> portion of screen just as it ever did, but it doesn't remember the portion.
> Yet QuickTime Player is still good to keep around, because right now it is
> the only way in software to record your Apple TV's screen.
> 
> The basics on Apple TV
> On a Mac that's on the same Wi-Fi network as your Apple TV, launch QuickTime
> Player. Choose File and then New Movie Recording -that's Movie, not Screen
> recording.
> If you have a camera on your Mac, then you'll see yourself and a control
> strip with a red Record button. If you don't have a camera, you'll have a
> small blank image with that button on it.
> 
> .     Click on the down arrow to the right of the button
> 
> .     Select your Apple TV in the Camera list that appears
> 
> .     Click Record
> 
> That's Apple TV being streamed to a Mac and recorded by QuickTime Player.
> Just walk to your living room instead.
> This does not actually start the recording, but rather it tells your Apple
> TV that you want to record. The Apple TV will first show a code number that
> you need to enter into QuickTime Player to authorize the recording. Then,
> Apple TV displays a notice explicitly asking the viewer to Allow someone to
> record it, or not.
> Assuming that viewer is you and that you're up for this, once you click on
> Allow, certain things happen. Anyone watching that Apple TV will now see
> their regular screen plus a very big, very bright red border around the edge
> of the whole screen. They'll also find that their audio is switched off. You
> could find yourself unpopular.
> On your Mac, QuickTime Player will be recording the Apple TV screen -without
> that red border. 
> It is possible to hear and record audio, too. In that same dropdown where
> you chose your Apple TV as the camera, there's another section for
> Microphone. It, too, will list your Apple TV and you can select it as the
> source to record.
> However, you'll have to go back through entering an authorization number and
> clicking Allow before it will work.
> In our experience, it's not worth it. Your mileage may vary, but even in
> general use such as relaying YouTube videos from Apple TV this way, we
> regularly find video is great but the audio quality is choppy. Plus the
> recording is prone to stopping, not always for an obvious reason. 
> And you get oddities such as sometimes the audio won't play while you're
> recording, but it will when you then play that back. 
> Plus certain services such as Netflix are blocked from this working so you
> just end up recording a silent blank screen. 
> So while this is in theory a way to watch Apple TV on your Mac, save
> yourself the bother and wait for the forthcoming Apple TV Mac app instead.
> At least you'll definitely hear that, and you'll be able to click controls
> instead of hoping your remote is still in range of your TV.
> That said, for explaining how to, say, set up AirPlay speakers or route TV
> audio to your HomePod, screen-recording Apple TV is always going to be
> handy.
> Third-party apps
> Apple has made taking screen-recordings on iOS and Mac much easier, but
> there have long been third-party apps such as ScreenFlow that will do it
> too.
> 
> ScreenFlow is a screen recording app and a strong video editor too
> ScreenFlow is still the better choice if you're going to be making a lot of
> screen recordings, or if those recordings are going to be long. It's now a
> reasonably fully-fledged video editor, which means it's easy to cut together
> short recordings of long jobs.
> You can see how taking screen recordings is useful, and now you can see that
> it's easy, too.
> Let us give you just one word of advice, though. Remember to stop the
> recording when you're done. It is ridiculously easy on the Mac, especially,
> to forget. You come in the next morning and your Mac is complaining that
> it's low on storage space -because you've just recorded 15 hours of video.
> 
> Original Article at:
> https://appleinsider.com/articles/19/08/24/how-to-take-screen-recordings-on-
> mac-ios-and-apple-tv
> 
> 
> 
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