Why? The simpler the process, the more videos I make. I also got a green panel for those nice recordings where you are into the video, but I never used them yet. Then I got a few lights for when I’m recording in the evening or when the light is just not right. I usually put it before the screen while recording me coding: I also got a microphone for it, the TAKSTAR SGC-598, which sounds awesome. It also makes the background blurry in videos, which makes a nice effect. The flipping screen is the things I was more interested in. An entry level DSLR camera, but it has all I need: a flipping screen, and autofocus. Once I decided to get “serious” I then got a DSLR camera, a Nikon EOS 200D. immerse more into the video, it gives a nice isolation from the outside.It has a built-in monitor where those earpods are connected, so I can Then to get a better audio quality I got a microphone, a Samson Meteor. Then I switched to using my old Nikon J1 camera, much better quality but the problem was that it didn’t have a flipping screen, and one time I talked for 20 minutes without recording, and I didn’t realize it. I started by using my iPhone SE to record my face, and as a microphone too. I’m recording my videos using ScreenFlow. Since I started, I changed the setup quite a bit, and this post aims to describe how I do things. I really dislike programming videos where you don’t see the person talking. I recently started making some programming videos where I’m part screencasting, and part there’s a little icon of me showing up. I haven't researched beyond the Magewell.A detailed description of how I do my videos. So I have to record simultaneously into EOS Utility as well as Screenflow - in order to be filming my desktop - then substitute the EOS movie for the Screenflow movie of my Canon's footage. (You can crop it out of course - as an extra editing move later - but that's still far from perfect). EXCEPT that it now records a small red dot in the upper right corner - to let you know you're recording!! Huh? So your finished recorded product in Screenflow is still not what you may want. (Which of course defeats the ability to track your subject and keep the face in focus.) So then - Screenflow records through the Magewell okay. Utterly unusable! You can ONLY get rid of the box by physically moving the Auto-Focus button on the Canon to Manual Focus. BUT Screenflow, for some reason, keeps filming that moving white box. can be turned off in EOS Utility so filming goes ahead whilst Auto-focus is operating. The white box that follows your face around as you're moving?. It seems to work with its own EOS Utility BUT there's a problem using it with the Magewell in Screenflow. So - in other words - use Auto-Focus while filming movies. I have a Canon 7D - which I thought had the ability to do Face Recognition Auto Focus WHILST in MOVIE mode. ![]() Regrettably my experience with it is less than promising. ![]() So upon your recommendation I bought the Magewell HDMI to USB3. ![]() We can't promise they will continue to work since they aren't officially supported but those have been what users have reported. That would be devices from Magewell, Epiphan, Inogeni. "ScreenFlow doesn't officially support video capture devices but users have reported that HDMI to USB3 devices that are driverless do work. Craig - re your previous advice concerning HDMI>USB devices.
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