Yes Chris you're right. One way to do it is with SoundFlower, which enables you to route your system audio (ie. the audio information that would by default be sent to the computer's speakers/headphone jack) directly into any other application such as QuickTime. After the SoundFlower software is installed you'll just have to setup your system setting and QuickTime inputs to match.
Hope this is helpful, Colin Sent from my iPhone > On Sep 16, 2015, at 12:36 PM, Chris Freeman > <christopherbriggsfree...@gmail.com> wrote: > > If you use QuickTime, be aware it's video only, so you'll need a way to also > record the audio and then put them together later. > > >> On Wednesday, September 16, 2015, Gene Youngblood <ato...@comcast.net> wrote: >> Friends, >> I’m participating in a conference by Skype, and I want to record it. I’m >> assuming download is better quality than screen capture. I’m aware of two >> methods: Skype itself and Quicktime. It seems that Quicktime is a screen >> capture (at least that’s the language used in v. 10.4 833.7). Is Skype also >> screen capture (v.7.11 653)? One would think it could download its own >> signal before it’s displayed on the screen. Or is there another method apart >> from these two? Advice will be much appreciated. Thanks. >> _______________________________________________ >> FrameWorks mailing list >> FrameWorks@jonasmekasfilms.com >> https://mailman-mail5.webfaction.com/listinfo/frameworks > _______________________________________________ > FrameWorks mailing list > FrameWorks@jonasmekasfilms.com > https://mailman-mail5.webfaction.com/listinfo/frameworks
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