 e-cam live 4.1 has just been released and it's got some great new features and if you've been involved in the beta group of late then that obviously this will be nothing new to you. However, you may have just sort of missed quite how much has been added in over just the last couple of months. So let's dig into what it all involved. Shall we? And I've just sort of split this down into some really sort of high level bullets here. But actually there's a lot more going on within each one of these. So let's start off with a completely new type of overlay. Something that a lot of people have done. I've been asking for and this is the new shape overlays. So if we take a look down in the overlays window over here on my right hand side, down at the bottom here you can see there's actually two more types of overlays added in. But we're going to start with this one, which is a shape overlay. It's this one that looks like the rectangle, like the plane shape. So clicking on that adds in a rectangular shape like this. Clicking on the little pencil icon over here will bring up the settings as you're familiar with e-cam when we've got an overlay. You can access the settings. One thing that I'll note here is that now they have kind of unified all of these different little pop-ups. So for all different types of overlays, you'll find that there is a lot more consistency now. Whereas before things work slightly differently for text overlays versus camera overlays and so on. Now there is a lot more consistency in the way that these work as you'll see as we go through this video. So here I've clicked on the little pencil icon and we've got the shape there at the top. So the shape style at the moment is rectangle, but I can change that to a square, change that to a circle or change that to a squircle, which is one of those ones with that kind of dual radius corner going on. I'm just going to change that back to a square for the time being and I'll make that a little bit smaller and it's got rounded corner. So let's just take those off for the time being as well. So it's nice and uniform. So this whole interface here is going to be very familiar as we go through the other types of overlays as well. There is actually some more options in here, so you'll see that this opens up and expands and I'll come to those in due course as well. But to begin with, just to note that we can choose between one of those different four types of shape. Then we've got the fill. Obviously this is just a plain fill color at the moment. You just click on here to change. I'll change that to Ecamm Orange. Why not? So there we can just change that to any color we want using the apple color picker in the obvious usual way. But we can also apply a gradient. So if I click on here and go to gradient, then we can also apply a gradient. We'll see that we've got two colors now selected. So you can come and change which one of those two colors you want to change between. And you've also got this little rotary dial here for want of a better word. So I can now change that so you can see how it's changing the direction of that gradient. Maybe if I make that more pronounced, I'll change that to a more pronounced color change. You'll see exactly what I'm talking about. There we go. It's a bit of a disgusting match that is. But there you go. You can see what's going on there as I rotate that little dial. It is changing the direction. I'll change that back to that. It looks much more pretty. Next, you've also got motion and motion. What that's doing is that is actually just rotating that gradient around at a consistent rate there. So you'll see that at the moment you've got the sort of darker color over on the left hand side. And as I'm speaking, it's moving over to the right hand side and back again. So it's just continuously rotating. So if you want something to use in the sort of background of your camera, for example, let me suggest I just put this over here. If I come over to make this a rectangle and I'll just make that all the way over to here. And then let's just drop that down beneath my camera. This would be a way to get a sort of solid border around my camera. But you can see how there's a bit of movement there. So it's just adding a little bit of interest. So that's one potential use case you may have for that moving gradient. Let me just make this overlay smaller instead of inadvertently ending this recording like that. So let's take a look at what else you can do with this. We've seen the motion field and the solid field, but we've got all of these other effects down here. And these are really quite interesting. So the first one is blur. And now you'll see that we've now got a sort of transparent rectangle on screen. But it is blurring out everything that is behind it. So you can see here I can blur out that e-cam. I can blur out the writing there. But of course, if I move it beneath all of that stuff, then I could have it just blurring out my face. Oops, Daisy. Let me try and put that back again. I could have it blurring out my face, which would be a great thing, but not necessarily blurring out all of that text. And if I put it behind the camera, obviously, then we're not going to see it at all. So now you can see how I'm moving this around behind all of this stuff that's over on the right hand side. And so it's only blurring my camera. I'll move it right up to the top again, though. So now we're blurring everything. Let's take a look at some of these other effects. So as well as the blur, then we've also got a few other options. So zoom. This is not to be confused with what I'm doing with my little pro mouse pointer here, where I'm kind of zooming in on the screen. This is more of a zoom effect. So looking like we're going at warp speed, that kind of thing. So zooming me out of the screen. It's not really a practical thing for zooming into something on the screen, as you can see. The next one down on the list is motion. And this is kind of a similar effect, but it's simulating this kind of side to side motion blur, that kind of thing. And next on the list we've got pixelate. This one I can see having a real use case, specifically for blurring out the text on the screen. So if I'm doing something where I'm doing a screen share, maybe I'm showing something in account settings or something like that, and I want to blur out certain information, then we can use that pixelate to sort of pixelate the information on the screen or pixelate the people if we're in witness protection mode, that kind of thing. There is also, as well as pixelate, then we've also got another one down here, which is called hex. That's basically the same effect, but with hexagonal pixels instead of square pixels, if that makes sense. You can see what happens if I sort of zoom in. We've got those little hexagonal shapes going on there. Next one down is comic. And you can see as well this really highlights the fact that it is this shape that this is applied to. So if I was to make the shape much bigger and drag it over the full screen, then it is applying this effect to everything that is underneath it. And once again, if I was to move this down in the list here in the overlays and just put it just above my camera, then I could retain all of that stuff over on the left hand side, you know, all that ECAM stuff, but it is just going to apply that effect to my camera because that's the only thing that is underneath that within that stack. Because, of course, the overlays tab works like a sort of set of layers, if you like, with things laid up on top of one another. So let me come back over here and we'll take a look at some more of these different effects. Clicking on the pencil icon, again, we've seen the comic. So the next three down are twirl. So we've got something looking like that. And you can affect the or change the sort of strength of each of these effects by this slider so I can come over here and adjust how much the twirl is affecting that way. And then you've got the pinch, which is this sort of effect, sort of pinching everything into the middle. That looks quite, quite hideous. And next we've got the bump. Now you may think to yourself, what is the point of some of these apart from just this obviously comical effect of using all of these? Well, actually, there's a great use case for them. And people have been coming up with some really great effects that they can use these things for specifically in the Ecamm Live beta group. Because, of course, what is now Ecamm 4.1 was Ecamm beta 4.1 dot whatever. There's been several iterations of it. And there's been some really creative use cases for this put into the beta group. And I'll just demonstrate a couple of them or rather just actually shout out to those who have done them because they are some great effects. And I'll just pull up one in particular. So Martin McKenna, if you're in the Ecamm Live beta group, you will no doubt I've seen Martin's great demos of this wrong one. I'll bring that one up in a moment. Here we go. So Martin was basically combining a lot of these sort of effects that are changing what's going on in the background, but laying it over some other sort of motion graphics. So if you've got even just like a text ticket running in the background, and then you're layering up these different effects over the top of it, you can get some really quite spectacular sort of motion graphics for the background. So this is obviously creating something that is just a background during a live stream, you know, for a countdown or whatever. But it's all done just using those effects that we've now got in with those shape overlays. So some really great examples. Another great person I've got to give a shout out to is Brian Kosak. He's been going into the beta group regularly as well, just sort of showing how to use some of these things. You can see the little sort of rotating gradient he's got going on in there. Another chap, Paul Dixon, who I've got to mention as well, been doing some great ways or finding some great ways to use these new features. So if you're not already in the beta group, highly recommend checking that out and checking get those folks out as well. But just coming back to a little demo then, and I'll pop my little shape back up onto the screen here. I'll go back into my demo mode, right like this. And so here I've got my shape on the screen. So what else can we do with this? Well, we've also got the fill effects, which we've just looked at. So let's take a look at some of the border effects. So down here you can see we've got a border and it says non at the moment. We've got the borders that we're used to in Ecam, but we've also got a few others. So as well as being able to just pick a colored border for that shape, we can also use a gradient on the border itself. So separate to the gradient on the fill there, we've also got this same kind of interface here for adding a gradient to the border. And once again, we can rotate this to show which direction that gradient is sort of flowing in. We've also, though, got that motion gradient as well. So applying that, you'll see that that border is then going to sort of rotate around or rather that gradient is going to rotate around that particular shape. And then we can also, of course, add in corner radius as well, just as you're familiar with, with the camera overlays and screen share overlays too. So we can also choose which corners to apply that to, just as you are probably already familiar with. But this just applies to these shapes. The other thing, though, about this interface, I mentioned that this is kind of now familiar or at least consistent across different types of overlay. Well, one thing that I'm really pleased about is that this also now applies to image overlays because previously, if I wanted to add an image, if I wanted to add a border, I should say, to an image, I would have had to have done that separately out of Ecamm and then bought it in separately. However, now what we can do is if I just add in an image. So I've got my Ecamm live masterclass here. By the way, 25% off throughout this month of September. And you can get your 25% off with offer code Ecamm tech. This is following on from the workshop I did on the Ecamm channel earlier on this month. So running that special offer 25% off throughout the month of September. I'll talk more about that a little bit later. But this is just a little thumbnail image like this. And if I want to put a border on it, well, now I can simply click on the little pencil icon. We've got this familiar view here and I can change the border. So we've got a border color there. I can just adjust the border width. I can also add a corner radius to it as well. If I want to give that nice little rounded corners. And as you can see, we can do exactly the same as we're familiar with with all the others so I can select the corner. So we've got the exact same sort of effect there. Incidentally, we've also got things like the opacity as well. We could always make any overlay opaque or transparent like this. But it's just nice to have everything consistent with a single slider for it in there. I'll come to some of these other things in a moment as well. We have got some other little things that you can add into these little things. But just note that you can add all of those same sort of gradient borders, the motion borders and so on. Just like that. So I'll just leave that as a colored border for the time being and just leave it plain and change the border width like that. If I pop that little shape up though, there is some other thing that we can add though, which is drop shadows. So that is also in this little overlay window. And you'll see that down at the bottom here with this more options, we've got this thing down at the bottom, which is shadows. So clicking on that, you'll find that it's going to drop in a shadow. And if I just make this a little bit bigger, you can see that the shadow is coming in. I need to make it a little bit darker. Perhaps that might be it might help you see what's going on there. We can see that the shadow is difficult because I've got a black top on that's probably the issue there. I'm going to turn the blur down. And now you can see that the shadow is sort of appearing whereas it's just here. So we're getting that shadow appearing behind that specific overlay. So if I just make this more blurred, it's having a sort of making it more of a blurred effect. Whereas if I take that all the way down to there, we've basically just got a sort of solid black color in the background. You can change the distance. So how far that shadow is sort of set off like that. If I come in here and change the actual shading as well, I could make that slightly more transparent in here as well. That would be another way to do that and add in the blur. But although it is called a shadow, it's actually more than that because you could use it for a glow effect. So if I just, for example, take off the border completely here and so we've now got that shape. Let me put it up here. Maybe that might be a little bit better. What we could do is if I change the color of the shadow to something that is a lighter color, then in effect we're going to get more of a glow. So although it's called a shadow effect, it can equally be an outer glow effect as well. And we could take the distance all the way down to zero and then take the blur up. And then it's just going to be a nice little halo around it. And then of course we could just combine that maybe with a border, a solid border, reduce the width of it slightly. And now we've just got a nice little sort of glowing effect going on that particular overlay. So that is the shadow effect and that applies to everything, by the way. So we can use that with image overlays, with our camera overlays, with everything. All of these effects that I'm talking about can be used with all of those. So next up I want to talk about another feature which we've got again, sticking with overlays. This is the overlay update, it seems. So down here though, I mentioned the opacity. We've also got rotation and this is something that applies to all overlays as well. So if you want to just have your overlays off at a jaunty angle, for example, then you can do that. We did have previously rotation of camera overlays, but it was limited to basically 90 degrees and so on. Whereas now you can just literally come in here, go to the slider there, and you can adjust the rotation wherever you want from all the way around that way to all the way around that way. So you've really got sort of total control over it. Speaking of total control, you can see that I'm here using this little slider and I'm clicking on it with my mouse and I'm moving left and right. One thing that you might find sometimes if you're using a mouse is it might be tricky to get these numbers exactly where you need to. Well now, actually, if you just hover over it, you can now use the arrow key. So I'm now just pressing the arrow key on my keyboard and it's just sort of incrementing it by one little point. And as soon as you move your mouse off of that, then it's going to stop. But as soon as I put my mouse over that again, I'm not clicking on anything except the left and right arrow. So that applies throughout the ECAM interface. So it's great for finer adjustments of different things in here. So if you want to just come in and adjust text sizes, any little slider volumes and things like that, you can do that. So just the same if I come here, I can adjust this on my master volume up and down as well. So then if I come back into this shape, let's keep going through this list. We've gone slightly out of order, but it doesn't quite matter. We've also got this thing called blend modes. And that is down here in these extra settings as well. What this is is it's where you've got a shape and you want to apply some sort of effect to whatever is behind it. So this is going to be easiest to demonstrate with if I just sort of put this over my face here like this. And then I'll go to the blend mode. You can see normal. If I go to darken, it's basically going to apply that color to whatever is in the background. In fact, let me just take the shadow off. There we go. If you've got the shadow on it, then that's going to be casting a shadow behind everything. So we don't want that on. But what it's doing is it's kind of applying the color of the overlay to whatever is behind it. So there is darken. We've got multiply, which is kind of like adding those colors together. Color burn. If you're familiar with photo editing in Photoshop and things like that, these kind of blend modes are all going to be familiar to you. So color dodge, soft light, very different things like that. So that is just removing that color from the background, for example. So these are all the different blend modes. I'll leave it to you to go through and to try all of those different ones out. And it depends on obviously what you've got the blend mode set to. And then also what the primary color is that you've got the main color that you've got the overlay set to as well. But you can see the kind of effect that that's having. And once again, this applies to anything that is behind that. And this is where some of the folks in the beta group have been having real fun. Just sort of layering up multiple different effects through using multiple different shape overlays to get all of these different effects going on. So that is the blend modes. Whilst we're in here as well, there are a few other things just to mention. Namely this one down here, which is we've talked about the rotation. So I can put that one back to straight there. We've also got a new transition here. So previously you could have things fly in and out from the left and right. Let me just take that blend off. Where is it going? The blend mode. Just go put that to normal. So we've just got a plane shape. We've got this transition though. So flying from left, right, top, bottom. We've now also got these ones which are spin in. And so this works something like this. If I hide the overlay, you'll see how it spins out. Show the overlay again and it spins in from this side. And once again, this transition is going to be the same for all different overlays. So if you've got your image overlay here, you can see how we've got the transitions there as well as the shadows, the blend mode and all of that kind of stuff. So what I'm talking about here for shapes does apply to everything else as well. So that is the blend mode. So then there is another thing which is related to overlays again. And it is this time related to green screen. Previously we obviously had green screen with cameras. So you can use green screen to great effect in e-cam if you've got a camera and a green screen behind you. You can also do some creative things if you are wanting to do screen sharing using green screen because you can toggle on the green screen effect. So you could bring in a keynote slide, for example, with a green background and so that would be a way of bringing on animated graphics over the top of your e-cam production. And that's something that I've done. Lots of other people in the e-cam group have done as well. Well, now they've added that green screen ability also to videos and photos. So that means that if you've got a graphic that you want to bring into e-cam and you happen to have it with a green background, then you don't need to sort of key out that separately and remove that before you bring the image in. You can just bring it in, drop it in and turn on that green screen effect. You can also do it with videos. And this is something where I think people may want to try this out. So here, if I want to have a little, since I'm in Thailand, a little elephant walk across my screen. I can do that if I've got a video on green screen and it's quite common that you can find these sorts of things on Adobe stock or various different places like that, where you get the video with the green background for you to then bring into your editor to key out in post. But obviously, we don't want to do that with e-cam. We want to do everything in one take, or at least certainly I do. So with this, we have this little elephant video. So if I just show this one here, I've just got a little video which is this little looping thing of an elephant walking across the screen. So all I need to do is go into the settings here and what you'll see is we do have the option to toggle on green screen and it's actually in this blend mode. So if I go into the blend mode here for this overlay and toggle on green screen, then you'll see that the green disappears. Let me just show that again. So there we go. I'm going to toggle it on and off now. So if I just, maybe if I just pause this, that might help. So I've paused that little animation and I'm just going to go into the blend mode and show it either in normal or if I toggle that onto green screen, you can see what's happening. It's just keying out that green screen in that particular video. So I know that that is something that a number of people have asked for so it's great to have that in e-cam now. So that is overlay green screen that we've just mentioned. We're just down to here right now. So the next one that I want to talk about then is text formatting and there's actually a few great updates when it comes to text formatting. So we have in fact got an entirely new text overlay or at least there's a new way of accessing it. So let me just come down to my overlays window again. Previously, if you wanted to add in a text overlay, you will be familiar with clicking on this button and this will bring up this box. We add the text in and then now we've got our text somewhere on the screen. Let me just zoom into this text a little bit there. I've got my text box. Well, previously, if you wanted to adjust things like the border and the background and so on, you would have done that in that little text, the text window there. Whereas now they've made it sort of consistent and this is what I'm saying about, you know, we've got this consistency now with overlays. Now we've got this familiar thing of being able to change the background. So if I want to put a colored background in, if I want to change the text margin, so the size of it, everything is done from this little pop out window here. If I want to add on a border, I can add in a border to it as well. So let me give that a white border. Why not change the border width? So we've got this familiar pop out here where we're going to change all of that. We can still obviously go and edit our text and so that we are going to do from here. So this little edit text button here. And so whereas previously, we used to have our controls for things like border and color over here. We have still got the text color because you may want to change individual words in the text. For example, like this is just one text box where I've got Ecamp 4.1. So I wanted to change the color separately to the 4.1 versus the Ecamp. So we can still do that separately here just by highlighting the text in the window. We can also do all the things we could do before changing text size and so on. But there's two new things that have been added in here. One of them is kerning. So kerning is the distance between the letters. So if I just maybe make this text a little bit larger so you can see what's going on. And actually what I'll do is I'll make a couple of lines of text. So I didn't want to change to that scene. That's a completely separate scene. A demo of taking zoom into Ecamp. Anyway, let me just place this text down here. So now if I highlight all of this text, we've got kerning, which is the distance between the letters. And then you've also got line height, which is how far between the lines. So now we can adjust that kind of stuff. So that gives us a lot more control over the way that our text looks on screen. One of the ways that these text boxes have always behaved, though, is that if you drag the corner and expand it like that, you can make it larger or smaller. And you can also drag the side here if you want to make it wider. But what that means is if you actually go into this text and edit it, you might well be very precise in terms of setting a text font size here. So let's say 18 and I'll click on that. But then what I could do is I could duplicate that text box and I could expand it. And then if I go into here, it's going to still tell me that the font size is 18, but clearly it's a different font size to the other one, which in theory is a duplicate. So actually this way of creating text boxes always had a couple of issues, certainly for me and I know for others as well. So what they've done is they've added in a completely new type of text box as well, which is this one down here. And the original text boxes, they are now calling dynamic text boxes. And these ones here, which is this new type, is called just a text box overlay. And clicking on that, you're going to get the exact same interface. And in fact, actually, it's just a new way of accessing this text function because we can also change the style up here. So whereas normally it would go into a dynamic text box, which is the ones that we are familiar with, we've now got basically these extra two in addition to scrolling ticker. So we've always had scrolling tickers, but now we've got these extra two here. And I'll talk about the difference between them in a moment, but basically now this text box is going to behave slightly differently. Because as you can see the text box here, if I change the size of it, the text is actually staying the same size. So it's more like a, I was going to say a traditional size style text box. But I think you know what I mean, whereby the text is going to stay the same shape. Now it will actually reduce the text. If we get to such a point that it is so tiny on the screen like that, then it's obviously going to try and preserve the text so that you can see it. But in general, it's going to stick to whatever text font size that you actually put in there. And so this is much better. I mean, this is what I've done over on this side over here where I've got these different things in. This is just a text box. And then, you know, everything's just sort of filling up in a more logical way and consistent in terms of the text size. Now, if you did have a lot of text in here, you could have the issue where it's going to sort of shrink it and you may not actually want that. So if I go into edit text and then I'll just go in and put in some long form text. So there we go. Laura Ipsum, why not? And look how quickly I can type. Click on save. And so now we've got a box with some more nicely formatted text. Of course, we can click on here. We can go into the edit and we can change the formatting, whether it's centered left or right, justified and so on. So let's put it in the center for now, shall we? So there is a couple of options then in terms of the layout. So I mentioned that it is going to sort of shrink down the text, but actually you don't have to have it doing that at all. And if I come in here, you've got the option of either shrink or truncate. So instead of it shrinking down the text, which it's going to do quite a lot now since we've got a lot more text in there. And by the way, you can see it's not completely shrinking it down. There is some spill over, but it's just doing it as much as possible. But if I click onto here and I go into this one and say truncate, then what's going to happen there is it's completely preserved the font size, but now it's just basically truncating it based on the size of the box. So you've got those two different options there. So that is the new text boxes. And the other thing that we've got with text as well that you might be interested to do is again more for sort of an effect. If I come over here and I go to this text, we do have this option for text cut out. So if I click on that one, what's happening is and probably I need to just go in and I'll just change this text a little bit so it makes it a little bit more obvious. In fact, let's just give this a let's call this just title like that. And I'm going to adjust the the kerning slightly in there and the font size. I'll make that much bigger like that. And let's make it nice and bold. Shall we as well? And then click on save. And here you can see that what we've got is a sort of transparent cut out. So what I need to do is just make that a little bit bigger. So the E wraps around. Let me come over here and do this this way from this side. There we go. So now we've got a sort of title block. And then what I can do is I could adjust the sort of space around that. Where has it gone? Text margin to increase that margin around there. So now we're basically getting a title that's covering the screen. I'm making a bit of a hash of that. I would need to just adjust the size a little bit more. But this is where you could have an effect of, you know, being able to see through, you know, maybe in a countdown or wherever you might want to have it so that you've got this effect of being able to see through. Maybe you want to just change the background of that. Let's change the background here to a plain background with some transparency, something like that, to give you the view through the title there. Again, I could be doing this a little bit better if I spent a bit more time on it. But that is just another effect that we've now got. I just want to mention once again, the Ecamm Live Masterclass, though, this is over 100 lessons all to do with Ecamm Live. You can get lifetime access. And as I say, because I've just recently finished the Ecamm Tools and Tech workshop as a bonus for that, I'm also offering 25% off all of my courses, in fact, over on takeonetech.io. But you can get the Ecamm Live Masterclass at ecammlivemasterclass.com. 25% off with the offer code Ecamm Tech. And this is lifetime access, by the way. And with all of these new updates that have just come out in the Ecamm Live 4.1, are we adding these all into the course content as well? The regular price is $147, but with that 25% off, it's something like just over a few cents, over $110. So it's a great way to stay up to date with all of the latest updates as and when they come out. So check that out. You can find a link down in the description. But for now, though, let's get back to the demo and let's get back to the updates. So apart from the text formatting, another thing, then, that they've updated is comments and reactions when it comes to your live streams. So if I just add in a sort of dummy comment here, and what I'll do is I'll come back to demo mode. I'm going to add in this comment, which is somewhere down here. Oh, it's right up at the top. Here we go. I've got this little comment here. This is just a placeholder comment. You may have been familiar before when you are adjusting comment sizes that the icon here for the person who has left the comment just got sort of huge if you made stuff narrow and then if also depending on the text size, how far this was spilling out. You could, in theory, be in a position where the little avatar there of the person would be just absolutely massive. So this thing down here could be taking up a huge amount of space on screen. Well, they've added this little slider here over on this side. My little pro mouse has just decided to stop working. Where has it gone? Let me just try that again. This little slider just here, there we go. So now I can adjust the maximum size of that particular avatar. So if I take that down there, you can see how we can make that much smaller. And also the way that these text boxes now work is more similar to the text boxes that we talked about earlier. So you can see how that sort of spills around and the way that it expands open. But that thing of being able to adjust the avatar size is something that I think is really useful. Here I just want to mention again the great work of the folks in the beta group and specifically in this case, Paul Dixon, he came up with a great use case for this new comment style. So I feel a little bit old school now because all my comments tend to come in on the screen like this. But what he did was actually create a dedicated scene for comments, which looked something like this. And you can see that what's going on here is just there. He's got sort of a white box using the shape overlays there. So a nice rounded corner white box. There is a little sort of quote marks somewhere around there as well that are just sort of embedded in there from text. But then bringing in the comments like this. And I just thought that that was an absolutely excellent implementation of comments on a live stream. So rather than having them just, you know, popping up during the live stream, if you've got a dedicated segment in your live stream where you're going to go over and take comments, why not make a big thing of them in this way? And I just thought that that was an absolutely excellent implementation there from Paul. So outstanding work. And he's been doing some great stuff with all of these different kinds of overlays, you know, creating like these sort of glass effect and all sorts. So highly recommend checking him out as well. As well as the overlays, whilst we are still talking about comments and reactions then. The other thing that's been added in is if you are on a live stream and you've got your comments and reactions window open, I'm not streaming at the moment, so you don't see it. But normally you would see that you've got all of your comments. There's also a search box where you can search for things like the Q colon. So if you hear everyone in e-cam in the chat, Mr. Moderator Paul Duncan always saying, put a Q colon in front of your question. It's because you can filter and search by those different things. So that's nothing new. However, what they've added in is now when you get super chats, they will appear in their own dedicated section. So normally you've got the main chat. You've got things that you've favorited. But now you'll also see them in the a dedicated super chat segment as well if you've got super chats coming in. They will also show up in your favorites as well just by default. So it's great that they've added that in for super chats. The other thing related to super chats is if I go over to my little e-cam preferences over here and I'll just toggle these on. Here we go. If you look in the shortcuts menu, then you'll see that we have now got a super chat shortcut trigger as well. So these are for linking in with Mac OS shortcuts. So if you want to have it set up so that some sort of automation happens when a super chat arrives, you could literally have it flashing your lights on and off whatever you wanted it to do. So it's great that that has been added in as an option there. I'm not quite sure what I would have it do with my setup because I'm not using shortcuts for that kind of thing. But it's there nevertheless if you want to have it do something. So great to see that integration. Another final thing that I'll just mention then as well is getting away from overlays is in the profiles menu. So if you come up to profiles up at the top, they've now added a recent section. So whereas before, you would just see a whole long list of all of your different profiles. Now they've added in this little recent section which will have the latest ones that you've been working in. So it just makes it sort of quicker to flick from one thing to another. So that's it for this update. Really fantastic and packed out update as well. It's been about two months in beta so that this has come out. And I think we're up to beta six or seven. I can't remember. So these things have been filtering out. And sometimes I find that when you're on the beta program, I mean, I use the beta almost exclusively, you kind of forget like all these different things that have been added in. And so it's only when you come to take a look at the actual release at them all grouped together that you realize this is really just another fantastic update. What I'll do is I'll leave a link to some of my other e-cam videos over on the right hand side. So if you want to check those out, it's a great way to find out and learn more about e-cam. And don't forget to check out that 25% discount through September off all of my courses. Link in the description.