AceThinker Screen Grabber Premium is free-to-try software that gives users freedom in screen grabbing by letting them choose whether they wish to capture in full-screen, webcam, video calls, or using region mode.

The editing features of GifCam are great, too. You can remove frames, choose five color reduction schemes, and detect and compress frames. The personalization of GifCam and the special effects make it an appealing alternative to Giphy capture windows.


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Using the app is fairly straightforward, too. Just drag the capture selection over the video you want to GIF, hit the record button and really, that's about it. From there you can tag, upload to Giphy or share on your social network of choice -- all without leaving the program window. You can save your creation as an MP4 file, too.

Along with a name-change and a version-number-nudge to 2.2, the new version has a new capture system for high-definition GIFs, new editing controls making it easy to caption, resize and trim GIFs, and a revamped user interface to make the app a bit easier to use.

As far R packages, shinysense, which lets you access webcams, is under development, but I haven't seen anything for screencapture directly. I suspect writing a cross-platform solution would be complicated.

If you need to capture video and convert it to GIF, or a very long involved sequence of steps, then you'll need to combine two separate programs. A video screen capture tool, and a movie to gif conversion tool.

There don't seem to be that many apps that do the movie --> gif conversion on OS X, though. A lot of people use VLC to capture frames and imagemagick to collect them back together into an animated gif. This is probably why the only answer to the conversion question above used an online service.

This technique is somewhat limited in that you can't easily capture video frames without pausing the video before each capture (for that you should get a video screencapture program and then convert the resulting mov or avi to animated gif), and you can't readily adjust the frame time for each frame.

This is an important topic to discuss as we all came across some specific areas while testing an application which needs to be highlighted using a video. In highly professional software testing company, there is an inventory of video capturing tools that can help their engineers to showcase defect in an effective way. Sometimes, describing the exact steps in video is so important when a screenshot is not capable enough to capture that particular moment when defect occurs.

You could also directly record your screen using a tool like GIPHY Capture. You would just place the GIPHY capture window over your Tumult Hype document's preview. (We recommend Safari for best performance).

LICEcap

(Windows, macOS)

Free, open source application used to capture and record screen activity. Many Brave employees use this due to its simplicity and quick production. Appears to be Catalina-compatible despite reports of incompatibility (see post below for more info).

Free, open source application used to capture and record screen activity. It works almost exactly like LICEcap, maybe even easier. Installation varies with distro, but the website includes instructions for many distros. In addition to animated GIFs, it can record in APNG, WebM, and MP4 formats. You can change default format in Preferences (accessed by clicking Peek icon in upper left of Peek window).

ScreenShot+Record Desktop Applet

(Linux - not sure how many distros, but at least in Ubuntu-based with Panel)

Free, open source applet used to take screenshots and capture and record screen activity. A little camera icon sits in your panel and you click it when you want to use it. My guess it it simply invokes some built-in functions from a convenient access point and adding some scripting.

Lightshot Screenshot

(MacOS)

Free, open source screen capture application that comes with additional features (pretty much the same as the OS builds in with Shift-Cmd-4), such as:

ShareX

(Windows)

Free, open source tool to capture full screen or regions, record video and gif and allows you to upload the capture area or video for easy sharing. The capture process can also be task driven to automate parts of the process.

You could search your package manager or equivalent, or use apt or equivalent, for screen capture, but I tried =linux and found this thing (Peek) that appears to be very like LICEcap from its description:


Interestingly, you can also mix photos and videos together. You can even move around or delete individual frames. And you can select the portion of the screen you want to capture when converting videos.

Gifox creates animated GIFs on your Mac in two ways. You can load up a video file and turn that into an animated GIF. Or you can capture part of your screen and do the same. With the screen capture option, Gifox lets you record either part of your screen or a particular app.

Each of these intuitive tools offers something a bit different from the others. Depending on whether you want to use existing images and videos or screen captures for your GIFs, these should have you covered.

My original intention here was to capture the tide at its main intervals, to create a place-based schematic of the intertidal for a field guide I was working on. So I divided up my day and the tide into four intervals, defining the lower lowtide line, the upper lowtide line, the midtide line, and upper tide line. 17dc91bb1f

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