ScreenCastle Makes Web-Based Screen Capturing Easier Than Easy
June 15, 2009 by Victor
A good amount of free web-based screen capture solutions exist today, many of which we regularily review on this site. Today, however, ScreenCastle a new web-based video capture solution came to my attention.
ScreenCastle is by far the easiest web based applet I’ve used, and it really holds true to its “One Click Screencasting” philosophy. ScreenCastle brings the following features to its users:
- 100% free
- It is possible to record fullscreen or to choose the part of the screen to record
- Unlimited fullscreen resolution recording.
- Audio recording (from primary audio recording device such as computer mic)
- Unlimited video length
- Unlimited maximum number of videos
- No registration
Features like unlimited resolution, length, and number of videos truly make this applet stand out from the crowd. There is also an API provided for developers who would like to integrate this technology into their own websites and applications.
Using ScreenCastle
As soon as you open screencastle.com, you will see the huge red button to the right. That is what needs to be clicked in order to begin the screen capture.
After you click the button, a security warning comes up, you must accept it for the recording to work, as ScreenCastle needs to gain access to your computer. After that, ScreenCastle lets you choose if you would like to record your entire screen or just a part of it. You are also able to record from your mic by ticking the checkbox in the lower bottom of the window. Once you are finished configuring the recorder, the arrow at the bottom must be selected.
You will now see a black bar at the top of your screen. Click on “start recording” for the recording to start, and then go back to the top of the screen and select “stop recording,” then “save” in order to save your video. This is where I was disappoined. I attempted to record a minute of HD video and even though it was recorded, the video was unable to proccess, thus making ScreenCastle not all that it is made out to be.
I then went ahead an recorded some simple internet browsing with some standard definition YouTube video (near the end of the video). That didn’t work either. I tried recording 10sec of browsing a text webpage, and although it did get to the uploading step, the video never actually proccessed. I am assuming this is a temporary problem with the site and will be fixed. Once it is, samples of video recordings will be added.
Finally, assuming the uploading and processing does work, ScreenCastle gives you several ways to share your video:
- Link to watch (YouTube-like streaming Flash video)
- HTML embed code
- BBCode (for posting video to forums and message boards)
- Direct link to media file
- Preview images (for linking to video)
Conclusion
ScreenCastle is a great idea, is easy to operate, and seems to work smoothly until you get to the final step. No matter what scenarios and resolutions were thrown at it, ScreenCastle would not let me upload any of my recordings. As such, ScreenCastle’s video recording quality cannot really be judged until that bug is fixed.
Nice web-based screen recorder application. Quite alike ScreenToaster. Thanks for sharing.