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Using Macromedia Captivate to Retouch Images
Have you ever worked on an e-learning project, only to find that you need to alter some of the screen action you have captured?
By: Mark Fletcher
Jan. 30, 2006 01:00 PM
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Have you ever worked on an e-learning project, only to find that you need to alter some of the screen action you have captured?
In this article I show how you can update your Captivate project files using an external image editor and insert new image files into your Captivate content. I also explain the way Captivate handles mouse movements, which is crucial when performing these tasks. For the last seven years, I spent the majority of my time creating video-based tutorials for VTC (Virtual Training Company) online and on CD. I've also created tutorials for Macromedia, Adobe Systems Inc., and the leading Macromedia extension developer, WebAssist. Historically I've always used an AVI recording tool to create my demonstrations. One of the problems that plagued me over the years, however, is how to alter the recorded screens. Below are some examples of when I have found it necessary recapture a screen area:
Why is this such as big deal? The main reason that editing demonstrations created using an AVI recording tool can be an arduous task is the way it captures your screens. Video files created using an AVI recording application are made up of many still images combined sequentially into one file. With video files, each screen with mouse action appears at a number of frames per second (typically a frame rate of between 5 and 10 frames per second), thus creating the illusion of movement. Video files use a delicate balance of key and delta frames. Key frames contain all the information that is required to display the frame. Delta frames contain only what has changed from the previous frame. Remember that the more movement there is in a video file, the more area of the screen is altered, which results in larger delta frames and, therefore, a much larger resulting file size. Some AVI recording tools give you the ability to overlay new graphics into your movies. However, because the mouse pointer has to be captured when the screen area is recorded, inserting a new graphic image will typically result in the pointer appearing behind the inserted image, so you are still left having to reshoot your movies! Capturing Screens Using Macromedia Captivate Actually, no. Captivate does not include the mouse pointer when it takes a screen shot. Instead, during capture, only the position of the mouse pointer (among other things) is stored. Only after you have finished capturing your screens does Captivate add a fully editable mouse pointer and curved motion path to your Captivate project file. Captivate gives you an incredibly flexible working environment. Editing Screens in Captivate
Being able to edit each of the background images that make up your Captivate project files gives you an incredibly versatile working environment. For example, one of the projects I just finished involved creating a series of interactive simulated tasks for the e-commerce software application WA eCart developed by WebAssist. Having created a Captivate project demonstrating how to install the software, I received an e-mail requesting that one of the screens should be altered because it displayed the software version number, as shown in Figure 1. Because Captivate enables you to copy the background image of a slide, altering a screen is incredibly simple:
Inserting New Images into Captivate Projects Again, while working on the WA eCart project, the day the software and interactive simulations were going to be launched, I received another e-mail telling me that, at the last minute, a new feature (an e-mail friendly cart) had been added to the application which needed to be somehow incorporated into one of the existing tutorials. Figure 3 shows what the original screen looked like. To resolve this issue, I simply took a screen shot of the new pop-up menu and placed this over the top of the existing menu. You can use a screen shot tool or simply Print Screen and crop the image (using an image editor such as Fireworks) to simply display the change. Once I was happy with the way it looked on all the relevant slides, I incorporated (merged) it into the slide background. See the result in Figure 4. Page 1 of 2 next page »
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