Today recommended 3 Mac OS gif recording screen software, are the author @5key personally experienced, each of the advantages are listed out, a high-quality, one-stop service convenient, support free of the wall cloud storage, see you need to pick a enough.
@5key: I should still be a more enthusiastic person, netizens to ask questions as long as there is free I will try to help answer. Sometimes people's problems by word description or voice is not very good description, so some I simply will be the operation of the recording screen after the pass.
At first I used ScreenFlow to video, uploading to cloud storage (DROPLR) and then sending the URL over. ScreenFlow's recording function is naturally strong enough, but similar operating instructions are mostly one-time and not too demanding on picture quality, as long as the operating procedures are clearly explained. It's a little cumbersome and time-consuming to videotape and upload videos.
Since DROPLR has added the recording screen function, basically all similar problems I use it to record a gif sent past. Today would like to chat with you about the recording screen production of GIF animation tools, but today is not to introduce DROPLR, but a full-time and GIF recording screen sharing recordit.
If you've ever used DROPLR, you can interpret it as a simplified version of DROPLR. Recordit is also a permanent top system menu bar tool that provides GIF recording, storage and sharing.
Click icon on the menu bar and select "record" to start recording work.
First you need to drag the mouse to select the range of the recording screen. Recordit the recording range cannot cover the top system menu bar, there are some minor inconvenience.
After selecting the range, click Icon again to enter recording mode.
Once the recording is complete, click icon to end the recording again, and the app will convert the recorded content to GIF storage in the cloud and return to the access URL. Open the URL in the address bar to see the recorded GIF animation.
Recordit offers free and Pro paid editions, with a free version of frames of only 4 frames per second.
If you upgrade to a paid version, you can record the access password protection for GIF animations and animations that are 12 frames per second, but the $29 price is not cheap.
From recording to uploading storage to sharing, Recordit offers a one-stop service. If the quality of the recorded GIF is not too high, it will be a good choice.
At the moment I'm using DROPLR. It is one of the few overseas cloud storage services that can be accessed at home, and recording screen and password protection are just a few of its many features. DROPLR is now fully free, the price of the paid portion is reasonable, and interested to go to their website to learn more. Pricing | Droplr
If you don't want to pay for it, you feel that the Recordit frame count is too low. Then you should try this single-screen GIF recorder tool –licecap. The app is completely free, the recording quality is very good, and it is available under OS X and Windows platforms.