On Tue, Oct 31, 2006 at 04:40:44PM +0000, Tony Arnold wrote: > That is really brilliant! As I've not really used IRC much before, I > actually learned a few things too! >
That worked then :) Thanks very much. > > * Run xwininfo to find out the xwindows window-id of the qemu window > > Presumably this ID is fed to recordmydesktop? > Yes. For example in one terminal I type this:- $ qemu -hda edgyxchat.qcow -net nic -net user -m 512 -soundhw all Then, once it's running elsewhere I run xwininfo and then when prompted click on the qemu window. This is the result:- [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ xwininfo xwininfo: Please select the window about which you would like information by clicking the mouse in that window. xwininfo: Window id: 0x3200003 "QEMU" Absolute upper-left X: 651 Absolute upper-left Y: 51 Relative upper-left X: 5 Relative upper-left Y: 24 Width: 1024 Height: 768 Depth: 24 Visual Class: DirectColor Border width: 0 Class: InputOutput Colormap: 0x320000c (not installed) Bit Gravity State: ForgetGravity Window Gravity State: NorthWestGravity Backing Store State: NotUseful Save Under State: no Map State: IsViewable Override Redirect State: no Corners: +651+51 -5+51 -5-231 +651-231 -geometry 1024x768-0+27 Then I run recordmydesktop like this:- [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ recordmydesktop --nosound -windowid 0x3200003 Initial recording window is set to: X:651 Y:51 Width:1024 Height:768 Adjusted recording window is set to: X:650 Y:50 Width:1024 Height:768 Initializing... Capturing! At this point it's now recording. I go to the qemu window (or indeed whatever window I am recording) and do the demo. When finished I flick back to the recordmydesktop window and hit CTRL+C and this happens.. Done. Written 96797 bytes (96797 of which were video data and 0 audio data) Shutting down...... Goodbye! [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ Job done. > > * Run recordmydesktop specifying the option to NOT record audio. > > Is that because the sound recording int recordmy desktop is poor or is > it a human interaction thing? > In a nutshell, the latter. I find it hard enough to steer the mouse, take in all the dialogs, think about what I'm going to say without the extra hassle of actually saying it. When I later recorded the audio I made numerous mistakes. So the ability to edit the audio in a simple audio editor like audacity, or in my case, just restart recording again, was beneficial. Given the lack of decent video editors on Linux I figured this would be a prudent decision. Don't get me wrong though, I am not saying the audio has to be perfect, but it certainly helps to be understood if you're not "uhm"-ing and "ahhm"-ing all the time whilst recording. Cheers, Al. -- ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk https://wiki.kubuntu.org/UKTeam/