When I am recording with Fraps it wont let me do the whole beatmap of the song. What should I do?
CUMtasiafailboat wrote:
i think you need to *cough* buy it
unregistered version has like a 60 second limit or whatever it was
or get like cumtasia
noSugoiReborn wrote:
SnagIt.
I said SnagIt has a crappy quality...failboat wrote:
crack fraps and encode with h264
fraps is more then good enough for videos in 720p even if you have a somewhat low end machinenoSugoiReborn wrote:
SnagIt.
noSugoiReborn wrote:
but if quality won't mind him, it'll fit him.
WHAT?!SugoiReborn wrote:
Fraps isn't the ultimate screen recorder O_O
I recommend you to choose CamStudio or Evisoft.
uhSugoiReborn wrote:
Well, Fraps is fine, but it needs to be purchased and it doesn't have the highest quality.
The only loss of quality that the FPS1 format has comes from the conversion from RGB24 to YUY2.failboat wrote:
fraps records the game with just minor loss, its efficient and that minor loss (that is probably more minor then from most screen/game recorders out there) is totally worth it for how simple it efficient it works
The trial has a 30 second limit per recording, but the full version has no limits.Ahegaokin wrote:
Doesn't Fraps have a limit on recording time?
Can the audio be recorded with itSugoiReborn wrote:
By the way, If you don't care about the video quality, you can always use SnagIt.
It's the ultimate screen recorder (Not mentioning the final quality).
A-hem. Fraps will record any resolution up to 2560x1600 in full frames, meaning you get the same result as if you take screenshots with <whatever framerate> and save them all as PNGs. That is, assuming you're doing full size recordings.SugoiReborn wrote:
You can make the same results using CamStudio and etc.
And 1080p doesn't always mean anything.
Is the quality HD? HQ? SQ?
Well not exactly, as the proprietary FPS1 codec uses YUY2 colorspace, the quality isn't 100% the same. Not that you'd notice any differences with a regular NT based LCD screen...Rena-chan wrote:
A-hem. Fraps will record any resolution up to 2560x1600 in full frames, meaning you get the same result as if you take screenshots with <whatever framerate> and save them all as PNGs. That is, assuming you're doing full size recordings.