Yes it does. The frame rate was 15 fps, max, and watching the Quicktime Info window while the movie was playing back revealed the fps was actually variable (down to 12 or so at times.) Final Cut wouldn't open the original recording with an error of something like: Final Cut does not recognize this format. So, I used Quicktime 7 Pro to downsample the 2560x1440 video to 1280x720 and upconvert the frame rate to a 24fps. I can't say it's a great way to make a screen recording... but it *is* free.
Yes it does. The frame rate was 15 fps, max, and watching the Quicktime Info window while the movie was playing back revealed the fps was actually variable (down to 12 or so at times.) Final Cut wouldn't open the original recording with an error of something like: Final Cut does not recognize this format. So, I used Quicktime 7 Pro to downsample the 2560x1440 video to 1280x720 and upconvert the frame rate to a 24fps. I can't say it's a great way to make a screen recording... but it *is* free.
fxmah 2 years ago
doesnt Quicktime X record at like some weird FPS?? i did a test of it and it seemed a bit choppy when playing back fast motion...
BMOCroc 2 years ago