I go to YouTube and sometimes I will see a person give a tutorial on how to operate a certain program, say Excel.
You will hear the guy talk but you will see his computer and just the Excel program opened and he’ll explain what he’s doing.
Now what are they using to do this? A web cam? Any special kind of equipment?
Here’s an example of what I mean
Is there a free alternative to Fraps? If you use their limited version it only lets you record for 30 seconds at a time and stamps a Fraps logo on the video.
Here is one option although it’s quite crippled compared to Fraps: CamStudio - Screen Recorder download | SourceForge.net
TechSmith Camtasia or Adobe Captivate is my guess.
Fraps was mentioned but I don’t think that’s a typical choice for recording tutorials of business software. Fraps is more of recording DirectX graphics video games.
On the other hand, products like Camtasia have editing wizards to “zoom in or magnify” a particular area of the screen, highlight mouse button clicks, positioning audio cues, and other useful features for authoring tutorials.
I think most movie editing software (windows movie maker doesn’t do it) will have a function to record your screen. I know Magix Movie Edit does, which is a cheap option for basic movie editing.
But Debut Video Capture is free and it works fine for this kind of thing.
I found one called Wink which seems quite fully featured and is free to download. This page has a list of screen capture programs.