Settings

Revision as of 14:38, 3 October 2018 by Mchehraz (talk | contribs) (Video)
Revision as of 14:38, 3 October 2018 by Mchehraz (talk | contribs) (Video)

Contents

General

Startup

To make Screenbits launch on Windows startup:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click General from the side bar to open General settings.
  3. Turn Launch on startup switch on.

Task Bar

To make Screenbits minimize automatically when recording starts:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click General from the side bar to open General settings.
  3. Turn Minimize when recording starts switch on.

Note: While Screenbits is minimized, you can still interact with it through Notification Area icon.

To make Screenbits minimize to notification area:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click General from the side bar to open General settings.
  3. Turn Minimize to notification area switch on.

Recorder

Output Folder

Recorded videos are saved in Screenbits folder under the Videos folder by default.

To change the output folder:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click Recorder from the side bar to open Recorder settings.
  3. Click Browse... button under Output section to open Browse for folder dialog.
  4. Select the folder you want to save videos into.


Note: Make sure your user account has write access to the selected folder and also the folder is in a storage device/drive with enough free space. Your security software might also prevent the application to access the output folder.

Output File

You can enter a template for the output file name that is created by Screenbits. File name may include one or more of the following placeholders:

Symbol Meaning Example
$Y Year 2017
$M Month 05
$D Day 10
$H Hour 03
$N Minute 55
$S Second 20

Default file name is $Y-$M-$D_$H$N$S. When a recording process starts, Screenbits will replace the placeholders in the file name with their actual values so using the default file name, output file name for a recording process that started at 14/05/2017 00:48:49 will be 2017-05-14_004849.mp4. If a file with the same name already exist, an underscore followed by a number will be added to the end of the name to make it unique. (e.g. 2017-05-14_004849_0001.mp4)

To use a different name for output files:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click Recorder from the side bar to open Recorder settings.
  3. Enter the desired template under Enter a template for file name. Optionally you can use one or more placeholders in the file name.

Hotkeys

Hotkeys allow you to control recording process using keyboard shortcuts when Screenbits is minimized or not in foreground. This helps you use Screenbits without having its user interface included in the recorded video.

Default hotkeys for recording actions are defined in the following table:

Action Default Shortcut
Record/Stop F10
Pause/Resume Shift+F10
Selector (none)

Custom hotkeys

In order to choose a different shortcut for an action:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click Hotkeys from the side bar to open Hotkeys settings.
  3. Click on one of of the boxes to enter a shortcut.
  4. Hold the desired keys so the combination appear in the box.

Note: you need to enter a valid key combination for each action to work.

Desktop and Pointer

You can add mouse pointer to the recorded video and also configure highlight options and click effects.

Mouse Pointer

To render pointer over the output video:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click Desktop from the side bar to open Desktop settings.
  3. From Pointer section turn Show pointer switch on.

Note: To show a highlight for the pointer, turn Highlight switch on.

Watermark

To add a watermark image to the output video:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click Watermark from the side bar to open Watermark settings.
  3. Turn Watermark overlay switch on.
  4. Select Image from the selector under Choose type of the watermark.
  5. Click Browse... button to select the image file for the watermark.

To add a watermark text to the output video:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click Watermark from the side bar to open Watermark settings.
  3. Turn Watermark overlay switch on.
  4. Select Text from the selector under Choose type of the watermark.
  5. Enter a text for the watermark.


Note: You can also customize transparency, margins, font, color, outline color, alignment and direction of the watermark.

Audio

To change format of the output audio:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click Audio from the side bar to open Audio settings.
  3. From Output format section, select the desired bit-rate, sample-rate and number of channels for the output audio.

Video

To change resolution of the output video:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click Video from the side bar to open Vudeo settings.
  3. From Output section, select output resolution from Resolution selector.

To change frame-rate of the output video:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click Video from the side bar to open Vudeo settings.
  3. From Output section, select desired frame-rate from Framerate selector.

Note: You can also enter a custom frame-rate up to 120 in the selector.

To change quality of the output video:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click Video from the side bar to open Vudeo settings.
  3. From Output section, move Quality slider to increase or decrease quality.

To force recording in variable frame-rate:

  1. Select Settings from Record menu to open Settings dialog.
  2. Click Video from the side bar to open Vudeo settings.
  3. From Output section, check Prefer variable frame-rate check box.

Note: Not preferring variable frame-rate does not mean that the video will be recorded in constant frame-rate. Depending on your system performance, recorder may fall back to variable frame-rate to be able to work properly.