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How to Record Screencasts on your iPad or iPhone

Posted on 02 March 2012 by Tea Server

Whether you are an app developer building cool apps or games for the mobile platform or a tech blogger who likes to review such apps, what you definitely want is a screencasting tool that will help you easily record movies of your mobile app.

Now there are tons of screencasting apps available for your Windows or Mac desktop but if you wish to capture the screen of your iPad or iPhone, the scene is very disappointing. A search for “screen recorder” or “screencasting” shows zero results in the iTunes app store.

That said, there are ways, or rather workarounds, by which you can capture the screen activity of your iPad or iPhone and convert that into a movie.  Let’s take a look:

Option 1. Create a Screencast Video using Screenshot Images

This is the quick solution. You can capture multiple screenshot images of an app (here’s how) and then stitch them together in one video either using Windows Live Movie Maker or iMovie on your Mac. This is how I created the following video screencast of an iPad.

If you would like to make your screencasting appear more natural, put all these different screenshot images in a PowerPoint slideshow, run it in Full-screen mode and then use Camtasia or any other screencasting software to record that slideshow. The advantage here is that the cursor will also be captured so people will find it easier to follow your video tours or game walkthroughs.

Option 2: Use Display Recorder to Capture your iPhone /iPad Screen

If you have jailbroken your iPad (or iPhone), you can use the Display Recorder utility to record the onscreen activity of your iOS device and save the video as an AVI or MP4 file. The app can also upload your recorded screencast to YouTube directly.

I haven’t tried this Cydia app myself but here’s a move of an iPad screen recorded using Display Recorder. The app doesn’t record system sounds though but you can run another app in parallel for that purpose.

Option 3: Create Screencasts using a Dedicated Video Capture Card

You can easily connect your iPhone or iPad to an external monitor – be it a TV screen or a computer monitor or a projector – using either the HDMI Adapter or the VGA Adapter.

Now instead of connecting the iOS device output directly to an external screen, you can connect it to a capture card and it will then automatically record your iPhone /iPad screen.

AverTV HD and Blackmagic Design are some of the available graphic capture cards that can be used in this kind of setup. The following video by Kelly Rush will walk you through the entire process of recording screencasts on tablets – Android, iPads or anything else – with the help of a capture card.

Also, if you do not wish to open to chassis of your computer to install an internal graphics card, there are other options like Epiphan and UltraStudio 3D. These are external capture devices though you would require a much higher budget for them.

Option 4: Record Screencasts using Whiteboard Apps

If you wish to create simple whiteboard style screencasts where your audio and all you activity on a whiteboard is recorded as a movie, you have some good options including Screenchomp, Explain Everything, ShowMe, Replay Note, Doodlecast Pro and Educreations.

ScreenChomp, Educreations and ShowMe are free apps for the iPad that will help you record Khan Academly style videos. You can create freehand drawings, write text, annotate pictures, and all your activity (including voice) will be recorded in one video.

Explain Everything goes one step further. It has a built-in web browser and anything you do inside that browser is also captured in the video so you be more creative here. You can also import PDF files, PowerPoint slides and other documents into Explain Everything through Dropbox, add voice narrations or annotations and publish them into a movie.

Option 5: Use a Digital Camera to Record App Demos

The trouble with all the above workarounds is that none of them would record your hand gestures.

To get around the problem, the developers of the Denso App recorded their interaction video with the iPad using the iPhone camera (see details). They placed the iPad on a white sheet of paper (picture), added enough lights to get rid of all the shadows and they also placed paper on the lamps to diffuse the harsh light.

It’s an easy setup and end result is much like the various iPad /iPhone demos that you see on Apple website. The following video from the DoodleCast team explains a similar setup that also uses an iPhone camera to record iPad videos – the key here is good lighting.

Option 6: Record Screencasts of your iPad or iPhone using AirPlay

I saved the best option for the last. If you have an Mac, just download the Reflection app and it will wirelessly mirror your iPhone or iPad screen  on your Mac desktop live. You don’t have to install any additional software on your iOS device, no cables are involved and there’s no jailbreaking required either.

Once the iPad or iPhone screen is beamed on your Mac desktop, you can use any of existing screencasting utilities – like Camtasia Studio, ScreenFlow  or Jing which is free – to automatically capture a video while you work on the iPhone or iPad. That’s easy and very convenient.

It’s time for a demo so here’s a screencast video of an iPad that I recorded using the Reflection app on Mac. This is what you have been waiting for!

Also see: How To Record your Comptuer Video Games

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Digital Inspiration @labnolThis story, How to Record Screencasts on your iPad or iPhone, was originally published at Digital Inspiration on 02/03/2012 under IPad, IPhone, Screencasting, Software.



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Samsung rewards its camera customer with an LCD TV

Posted on 31 January 2012 by Tea Server

Samsung Electronics Company Ltd., a global leader in Digital Media Technology, recently held a special Prize-Distribution ceremony for the Samsung Cameras Promotional Offer in Lahore. Mr. Zunair Sattar from Lahore was rewarded with a brand new Samsung LCD Television, as the first prize. To promote the innovative, sleek and feature-rich cameras by Samsung, a special [...]

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Syndicated from: GeoTauAisay Pakistan

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Flying my Space, Killing my people.

Posted on 25 January 2012 by Tea Server



[ News Item: Shoot down US drones, urge lawmakers in Pakistan.]

If you are single, it doesn’t mean you are as young as you once were. I have to admit that I often force myself into younger crowd, just to be able to draw energy from their spirits. Honestly there is not much gap, only if I leave behind the wisdom of my older folks.
Here is the excerpts of a brief conversation with an Engineering student from Karachi.
“How is love life?” I asked, since I heard engineering students have usually dry campus life.
“I am flirting with something” he replied in wit.
“some’body’, right?” I smiled to cover my invasive curiosity.
“Nobody! Its an ‘idea’”, he sparked firmly.
Before allowing me a pause for even a gesture he continued
“You understand science behind photo cameras?”
“hmmmm” I honestly intended to signal my discouragement for any further discussion on photography. Talk to me lakes, mountains, birds and butterflies said my inner voice but instead I snapped a quick one right from my heart to him, “you go to parks?”
Perhaps it was due to a recent television episode which is currently enjoying word of mouth of youngsters, which influenced my line to get this young man into grove.
He understood my intentions.
His face blushed, as he wearing a pure and genuine smile, covered in a natural blanket of shyness stressed to me again…
… “so i am flirting with this electronic and digital technology behind lenses of modern cameras”.
Reading face is a myth, since mine said “Bite me!”.
His subtle tone had more conviction than excitement this time, as he said;
“Did you notice the automatic face detection feature of new cameras?”

A totally new dimension of a young engineering student’s romance had unveiled itself.
I could instantly recall one such boxes appearing on my camera screen, though I have turned the feature off, lately.
But my friend’s latest camera shows as many number of boxes, as there are faces in a snapshot.

I remember saying “wow” as I kept sinking into the deep pit of this techno-fascination.
Visualizing my university instructor from Digital Computer Logic course, I fancied the programming code that must have been written, in order to perform this function.
Right at the moment, when live video feed is being played on the Camera’s LCD screen, a fascinating programming code in computer language enables an electronic camera to also behave as a facial sensor.
With complete grasp of this technological invention, and having not paused earlier to completely admire it, I was compelled to wear a natural facial expression of ‘wonder’ and ‘amazement’.
By now the myth of face reading, was also busted :)
I could only say “Fascinating” since I truly was.
He sucked me in completely by asking, “when a digital camera lens can be programmed to detect a face, would it be any harder to detect a flying object, lets say an unmanned flying predator or drone planes?”.

“Its both simple and cheap” he nailed it.
Now my disfigured eyebrows did all the talking, as I rubbed my hands and bent close to quench the thirst of my creative curiosity, while he fell his back straight and said…
“Such a small chip and lens can guide any missile automatically to target those, Flying our Space, Killing Our people!”


Syndicated from: Shoaib Ahmed’s Diary

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3G Android mobile smartphone IVIO icon pro offers by PTCL with EVO

Posted on 14 January 2012 by Tea Server



3G Android mobile smartphone IVIO icon pro offers by PTCL with EVO



PTCL offers for the first time 3G Android mobile smartphone IVIO icon pro with EVO enabled with amazing and exciting deals.


Specification 3G Android smartphone IVIO icon pro



Features of 3G Android smartphone IVIO icon pro
Blazing Fast Speeds—Pakistan’s First 3G enabled Android Smartphone with blazing Fast 3G speeds of EVO wireless broadband. Offering dual support for Wi-Fi and 3G, IVIO Icon pro lets you browse 24/7 without any limitations.


Surf ’n’ Talk Simultaneously—The country’s first Smartphone with dual support for EVDO and GSM letting its users surf n talk simultaneously while on-the-move and that too at 3G speeds. The best thing is its not GSM network specific, meaning all GSM subscribers can use the IVIO ICON PRO without worrying about any GSM network restrictions.


Android 2.2 Froyo OS –packed with a full web browser & an entire suite of Google Apps & access to over 250 thousand applications from the android market, EVO Icon Pro lets you communicate, surf, navigate, play games, stream videos and do a lot more simultaneously; while on the move.


Snap n Share instantly! Never miss a precious moment with Icon’s dual cameras. Capture excellent quality photos with the 5Mega Pixels Auto Focus Camera or use the front digital camera for video conferencing. What’s more—with 24/7 3G connectivity we let you instantly share these moments with your friends on facebook.


Personal Mobile Hotspot—Your IVIO Icon pro is your very own personal Wi-Fi hotspot anytime, anywhere that lets you share your 3G Internet connection with friends wirelessly & what’s more with Icon pro’s in-built EVO 3G you can smoothly share your connection with friends & still be fast enough.


On-the-Go Social Networking— Offering dual support for Wi-Fi & 3G, IVIO Icon Prokeeps you connected 24/7 to your world, whether its for work or fun. Whether its on-the-Go video conferencing with a client or accessing the internet for staying in touch with loved ones, one touch gives real time access to all. So Go ahead stay connected to your social networks through the pre-installed Facebook & Twitter apps; or stay in touch by making a voice call through Skype or Viber.


Un-interrupted Connectivity—Stay Connected without being tied to Wi-Fi. Now forget about finding a Wi-Fi signal or being stuck with a slow data connection on your mobile every time you need connectivity on the go. With EVO’s largest wireless coverage network of more than 160 cities we ensure that you stay on top of your world, wherever you move.


Amazing Launch offers



Post Launch Tariff
Customer can recharge the using any of the below options.


Smart 5GB
3 months EVO connection at Only Rs.999


Smart 15GB
6months EVO connection at Only Rs.1,999


Note: Account recharge cannot be less then the above Smart 5GB and Smart 15GB prepaid packages.


FAQ’S
Q1. What is EVO enabled IVIO Icon Pro Smartphone?
EVO enabled IVIO Icon Pro is Pakistan’s first 3G enabled Android Smartphone with dual support for GSM and EVDO, that lets its users surf and talk simultaneously.


Q2. Can I browse the internet while making a voice call?
Yes; with dual support for GSM as well as EVDO Rev A, the EVO enabled IVIO Icon Pro is Pakistan’s first Smartphone that lets its users surf and talk simultaneously. IVIO’s dual support for GSM and EVDO networks lets you make voice calls using your GSM network while the EVO 3.1Mbps lets you surf at speeds of up to 3.1Mbps in over 160 cities nationwide.


Q3. Does IVIO Icon Pro support wireless connectivity?
Yes; IVIO Icon Pro Smartphone offers support for


Wifi 802.11b/g
EVDO Rev A
Bluetooth EDR 2.1
AGPS, G-Sensor & E-Compass.


Q4. Do I have to use a specific GSM network to use IVIO ICON Pro?
IVIO Icon Pro does not require its users to be tied to a specific GSM network; meaning that any GSM network subscriber can use this handset without the worry of GSM network restrictions.


Q5. Can I use my Smartphone as a Mobile Wi-Fi Hotspot?
Yes, IVIO Icon pro can be used as a mobile 3G Wi-Fi Hotspot to enable sharing of WiFi & 3G connections with multiple gadgets simultaneously.


Q6. Can I use my Smartphone to take pictures & record videos?
IVIO Icon Pro has dual cameras, a 5.0Mega Pixels Auto Focus rear camera for excellent quality stills and a front 0.3Mega Pixels Camera for video calls. Moreover with your IVIO Icon pro, we also let you record your precious moments in the form of videos with the camcorder functionality.


Q7. What is the billing mode for IVIO Icon Pro Smartphone Packages?
IVIO Icon Pro Packages are based on prepaid billing patterns.


Q8. How can I recharge my EVO account?
Account Recharging for IVIO Icon Pro Smartphone would be through following methods:


Evo-Vfone prepaid Scratch cards
Easy Paisa
EvLoad
PTCL One Stop Shop Prepaid Top-up service


Q9. Are there any additional usage charges for the IVIO packages?
IVIO Icon Pro packages are offered on fixed buckets, meaning that once the prescribed volume limit is reached customer MUST recharge his account to get EVDO connectivity.


Q10. What happens if I utilize the subscribed package volume limit before the 90/180 days period?
In case of volume consumption before the end of the defined expiry period, you would have to recharge your account using either of the above mentioned recharge methods.


Q11. What will happen once my package has expired?
After the expiry of launch offer, customer would have to recharge using one of the post launch packages. In case a customer wants to switch his package from 3months to 6 months or vice versa, package change shall be done through request generation at PTCL OSS.


Q12. What is the battery time for my Smartphone?
The average battery time for IVIO ICO Prowith continuous 3G/Wi-Fi connectivity is 3-4 hours with about 3 days of standby time.


Q13. What is the warranty period for the Smartphone?
IVIO ICON PRO comes with one year warranty by Airlink Communications. Details of warranty are available on the warranty card inside your Smartphone’s box.

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Four years on…

Posted on 27 December 2011 by Tea Server

Benazir Bhutto on her arrival in Karachi in Oct, 2007. Photo: Beena Sarwar

It’s four years since those pistol shots and bomb blast in Pindi’s Liaquat Bagh ended the life of Pakistan’s most promising politician and hope for democracy. There is no one to replace Benazir Bhutto but her legacy lives on in many ways. This is the first legitimately elected government ever in Pakistan to remain in office for as long as it has – and it will be the first to complete its tenure if allowed to do so and hand over power to the next elected government. This political process is essential to move Pakistan out of a quagmire that has taken decades to push us into. There are no quick fixes, no magic wands that can change things overnight. What’s important is the process and at least that is under way – thanks to Benazir Bhutto.

Thanks to YouTube, archival footage is now available to remind us of her legacy. In his moving article on Benazir, Saroop Ijaz refers to this interview of her’s soon after Gen. Zia’s death, in which she outlines her political vision of looking ahead, without vindictiveness. He begins the piece with lines that Benazir Bhutto recited, quoting from Dr Khalid Javed Jan’s iconic poem on her return to Pakistan in 1986: “Mazhab kay jo byopairi hainwoh sab se baree bemaari hain…. In jhute or makkaron semahzab kay thekedaron saymein baaghi hoonmein baaghi hoon” (The traders of religion are the worst disease, I rebel from these liars and hypocrites).

Complete lyrics at this link.

Cameraman Arif Khan (seated 1st right) was one of those killed at the bomb blast at Karsaz. Photo: courtesy Asadullah Khan

When Benazir arrived in Pakistan in October 2007, the air of anticipation was infectious. I ended up riding out to the airport on the back of a motorbike, passing hordes of celebrating people (see my cell phone photos) and pushing my way through a huge mob, past her ‘janesars’, to the top of her truck with my colleague Absar Alam who interviewed her for Geo TV (thanks to Naheed Khan who invited us up top). This was just hours before the bomb blast that killed over 180 people and injured scores of others, including Benazir, as her convoy passed Karsaz Road in Karachi.

The next morning to everyone’s astonishment, despite her own trauma (ears oozing blood from the bomb blast), she breached security protocols to visit the injured in hospital, and by afternoon was patiently presiding over a chaotic press conference at Bilawal House. The place was ill equipped to deal with the explosion of TV channels that had taken place over the past few years. At one point, our eyes met and she smiled in recognition of the absurd situation.

Barely two months later she was dead – literally having paid with her life for democracy. I was in Lahore then. As we mourned together, Hina Jillani’s observation on how much Benazir had changed during her years of exile has stayed with me. She looked different, positively radiant, with a simple plait replacing the old bouffant hairdo, no heavy make-up, her by now trademark white dupatta draped over her head rather than the earlier matching shawls and jackets with padded shoulders. She was no longer arrogant, she listened, she was willing to learn.

Benazir Bhutto giving her first interview to a Pakistani journalist on her return in Oct, 2007. Photo: Beena Sarwar

But she remained consistent in her adherence to peaceful, non-violent, constitutional means to bring democracy back to Pakistan. This was clear even in the early years when she campaigned around the world against Gen. Zia’s military regime and came across enthusiastic young turks talked of revolution or fighting the army regime with guns. Her fighting spirit remained evident in her insistence on contesting elections under the Musharraf regime (as she did during the Zia years), even as many progressive liberals urged her to boycott. Her answer: “Boycott, and then what?”

She prevailed upon her former arch-rival Nawaz Sharif, who was dithering on the boycott issue, to agree to contest elections. Imran Khan in his wisdom, stayed out of the fray and in the political wilderness (until suddenly being projected into prominence earlier this year).

To those who tried to push her into supporting the individual over the institution (with reference to the restoration of the judiciary), Benazir wrote: “I remain committed to the freedom and vitality of democracy as the great Quaid-e-Awam had dreamt of. Yes, it is true that you have to deal sometimes with the devil if you can’t face it but everything is a means to an end. I have great respect and admiration for the Judiciary both bench and bar. I have great respect for individuals both present and ex. Ultimately, however, it is the institution that has to decide collectively what course to take. I hope this clarifies my viewpoint.” (Dec 3, 2007)

The devil of course was Musharraf and the deal was the much-maligned National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) without which she and other politicians could not have returned to Pakistan to participate in politics.

Lawyers' movement: PPP and ANP workers took the heaviest casualties on May 12, 2007 in Karachi. HRCP report: http://bit.ly/uv0uV4

As Marvi Sirmed writes in her heartfelt personal tribute remembering Benazir today, being a woman never hindered her,

“so much so that when the forces opposing her tried to use her biology against her, she turned it around. When she was expecting Bilawal, they announced elections around the dates they thought she would be in maternity. I cannot forget her coming to the political rallies with her intravenous drip in her hands… When she was expecting Bakhtawar during her premiership, the crisis was once again carefully chosen to coincide with the dates of her delivery. She did not make herself absent from her office for more than 48 hours.

“All through her political life, she struggled against the hegemony of the oppressive deep state that used every jape that they could, and from right-wing rhetoric that was nauseatingly misogynist and anti-people.”

Despite the hurdles, despite being always under siege – “We were in government but not in power” – she would say – she achieved much. Her son Bilawal lists some of these accomplishments in his tributeto his mother.

Benazir Bhutto with her children visiting Asif Zardari in prison. Photo: Larkana Times

What we do know is that there are 86,000 more schools because of Shaheed Benazir Bhutto. That, under her government foreign investment quadrupled; energy production doubled; exports boomed. Under her government, 100,000 female health workers fanned out across the country, bringing health care, nutrition, pre and postnatal care, to millions of our poorest citizens. It was under her government that women were admitted as judges to the nation’s courts, that women’s police departments were established to help women who suffered from domestic violence and a women’s bank was established to give micro loans to women to start small businesses. It was under Shaheed Benazir Bhutto’s leadership that cell phones, fibre optics and international media were introduced, and the Pakistani software industry blossomed. And it was on her very first day as prime minister, that all political prisoners were freed, unions legalised and the press uncensored. It was an amazing record of accomplishment, made even more remarkable by the constraint of aborted tenures, by constant pressure from a hostile establishment and presidents with the power to sack elected governments.”

The hostile establishment remains hostile but the President no longer has the power to sack an elected government. This is one of the current elected government’s several achievements that tend to get overshadowed by the explosive (no pun intended) situation around. Other achievements include the Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP), the Aghaz-e-Haqooq-e-Balochistan Package, increase of minimum wages from Rs 4,600 to Rs 7,000 a month, political rights to Gilgit-Baltistan, extension of the Political Parties Act to FATA, bills for women’s rights and empowerment, the 18th and 19th constitutional amendments (that include getting rid of Zia’s clause that allowed the President to dissolve Parliament), the combined NFC Award (moving towards provincial autonomy), signing Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline agreement despite American opposition, forcing the Americans to tie aid to Pakistan to the continuation of democracy with the ‘Kerry-Lugar Bill’ (another reason the military hates this government), kicking out the Saudi ambassador for distributing money to terrorists, expanding the Lady Health Workers programme (initiated by Benazir Bhutto), and continuing her legacy of non-vindictiveness towards political rivals and dissent. It should be a matter of pride for Pakistan that this government has not carried out any capital punishments, in line with its unofficial moratorium on executions.

The political situation remains volatile. But there are many positives to build upon. Things will not change overnight, but the process is underway. Despite the apparent unpopularity of the present government, theare is a difference this time round, given that efforts are being made to take preemptive steps to mobilise politically (for example, the Citizens’ statement on the ‘Memogate’ issue) against unconstitutional moves to topple the government. Perhaps some lessons have been learnt from the past.

Syndicated from: Journeys to democracy

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