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The answer is primarily that it's added to what the app can do with your Mac's screen recording when it's done. The app records your screen exactly the way it always did. You can tell it to record the entire screen or just a segment. You can tell it to record audio from the Mac or any microphone you've got plugged in. Then then whole point of this initially remains exactly as it was.
ScreenFlow is superb for capturing what's on your screen so that you can show someone how to do something. If you've seen any YouTube video about how to use, say, Keyboard Maestro, then the odds are that it was made using ScreenFlow. You can find other apps to do this same job and in fact Apple's own QuickTime Player can do it. Yet ScreenFlow tends to win out because it's such a solid and reliable tool that's easy to use.
Whenever we've tried alternatives, most especially including QuickTime Player, we've ended up having to reshoot because frames get dropped. So ScreenFlow became the tool we automatically turn to. Then when you've got your Mac screen captured, you can stay in the same ScreenFlow to edit what you've recorded. You can cut out those few seconds where you're seen entering your password, for instance. You can cross-fade between the start of an animation rendering and the end.
If you want to make someone focus on a particular menu or button in an application, then when you've recorded the screen you can zoom in on that spot. All of this is first-class and we don't say that lightly. It's just that all of it has been in several iterations of ScreenFlow. In 2017 at about this time of year, built on these editing tools to let you do more with any kind of video.
Not just screen recordings. We said that it was on its way to becoming a video production suite. ScreenFlow 8 is now there. We're still focused on using it for Mac screen recordings and there are some new features that particularly support this. For instance, you can now record a narration track right inside the app. Previously you would record it in some other app and then drag it into ScreenFlow as a another track.
Now you just press the button, choose your microphone and let ScreenFlow 8 play back your video as you speak. In practice you're going to need to a good mic and studio surroundings as you edit or the audio quality isn't going to be as good. Yet if you are editing in a good place, it's extremely handy to be able to watch what you're narrating as you narrate it. You can also better see what your footage contains because of an improvement to the timeline. Mc 3190. This is the Final Cut Pro- or Premiere-style bar beneath your video window that shows you the length of clips.
It's where you can move the cursor to skip through your material. Previously the whole video was a grey bar with a small thumbnail image at the start. If you split the video into clips, each became a bar with an thumbnail. Now the gray is gone and instead the bar is filled with a filmstrip-like row of thumbnail images. So it's quicker to see where a segment begins.
If you have multiple monitors you can now also split off that timeline from the video. Have a full-screen view of your recording in one window and the timeline in another.
That's perhaps only really useful when you've added so many overlapping layers that the timeline has multiple bars one atop the other. It's features like these that tip ScreenFlow 8 over into being a full production suite, though. As easily as you can add another screen recording, you can add any video or audio. Then you can treat them all the same: trim clips, add narration and so on. You can also layer video tracks. So you've already been able to add a second screen recording that you cut to at intervals.
Or if you think your viewer is bored of seeing a five-hour closeup of OmniOutliner, you have been able to record video of yourself and insert that in a corner. You can fiddle with your screen recordings to crop, resize and rotate them in 3D but now you can do all that and then save your settings. Do it once for a particular part of your video or for a specific track and then you can apply the same settings with a few clicks. Most of the time, though, we were able to find items on any keyword we could think of.
Then we found the video, audio or photograph, we could drag it onto our video. Once it's there you have a large, possibly ludicrously large, number of options. Video you drag in can be resized, placed anywhere on the screen, turned transparent and have its corners rounded. You can also annotate any video you have in ScreenFlow 8 and that now includes freehand drawing of shapes.