I moved the Snapz application out of the Application folder and put it somewhere on my HD, problem persist. Click on the audio track settings and choose the Qualcomm PureVoice option. As soon as you press the hotkey, Snapz Pro X springs to life (see screenshot). How can watching a video on the Web (forget recording, just watching) be jerky because I have a software that apparently is in conflict ? but it is not even on !) When you want to stop the movie capture, just press the hotkeys (by default, + Shift + 3) again. Not sure if this is related to Safari (some conflict) or something else (OS version ?) I have no problems with surfing the Web (Safari 5.0.3 Mac OS 10.6.5) It's not the website since I tried several different websites, different movies. What should last 5 seconds, last 30 seconds or more. So that is fixed.īut now when I watch a streaming video on the Web (even if I don't record it and Snapz is not even on) the video is extremely jerky it's just an image/photo that moves every 3-5 seconds. It didn't help with my problem, (actually now I couldn't start either), but in the meantime I found a simple solution to that. Notably, Ambrosia says that recorded movies are now compatible with video applications like Final Cut Pro, and movies with both microphone and Mac audio tracks. I wrote to Snapz (Ambrosia) and after a few suggestions that didn't work, they suggested to upgrade to 2.3.1 which just came out a day before and is also free. (when I want to stop recording, it doesn't stop). Also, on the Intel Mac, typing "file Snapz Pro License" results in a zlib compressed data message.I have Snapz Pro X 2 with Movie Capture 2.2.3 bought in Sept.2010.Ī few days ago I downloaded the free upgrade to Snapz (the Snapz Pro X 2.3.0) and had a problem with it Prior to Ventura, I had successfully activated the license file on the Intel iMac by double clicking it. But, double-clicking on the Intel iMac results in an exec format error. Double-clicking on my M1 Mac activated the Snapz Pro X license with Terminal set to Rosetta. Screenshots can be scaled, cropped, color. pdf, or Photoshop files, with precise control over image compression. Sorry.) GetInfo says the license file is a Unix Executable File. Snapz Pro X supports saving screenshot as. (Earlier, I had mistakingly shown an image double-clicking the actual app. The file I double click is Snapz Pro X License. I didn't think it made sense to execute the remaining commands suggested by nohillside because of this error. As soon as I start recording, using snapz pro, the sound on the wmv file immediately goes jerky, so therefore, the sound on the recorded movie is jerky. Here is the Terminal result for running cd. Finder says it is a Unix executable file. Whether I run either zsh or bash, I get the same problem, that the license file is not a directory. Does anyone have a suggestion how to get this command to work on my iMac? That is the same error I encountered on the Mac Studio before I changed Terminal to Rosetta. Of course, on the Intel iMac, Rosetta is not needed, but double-clicking the bin file results in the output zsh: exec format error. Once activated, simply click on the large MOVIE button, and then move the highlighted area to the portion of the screen youd like to film. I successfully installed the license this way on the Mac Studio by setting the Terminal app to open in Rosetta. Making movies is quite straightforward - after installing the software (no restart required, of course), hitting shift-command-3 will activate Snapz Pro from any application. Because Ambrosia SW is no longer in business and has no website, the only way to enter my license code is to run (i.e., double-click) a bin file named Snapz Pro X License that runs a terminal command. I recently upgraded both my M1 Mac Studio and my Intel iMac to Ventura. I still use Snapz Pro as my main screen capture app.
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